Bacterial Vaginosis
“I have itching, burning, irritation and/or abnormal discharge DOWN THERE!? What is HAPPENING to me?! This is so embarrassing!”
Let’s break it down and see the possible causes; what you need to do now and what you need to do in the future. Ultimately, this post is guidance and to give you a better understanding of what may be happening and why. You need to see your primary care to get the proper diagnosis. My goal is to teach and help you understand
If you have been itching, burning or having an abnormal discharge, you might be suffering from a type of vulvovaginitis, which is inflammation of the vulva or vagina. It could be mild or severe. It could occur for the first time and not come back again, or come back again often. In order to treat it appropriately, the type needs to be identified. Is it a yeast infection? Is it bacterial vaginosis? Is it trichomoniasis?
The most common cause of vaginitis is bacterial vaginosis (BV). The next common cause is candidiasis and then it is trichomoniasis. They affect the vulva and the vagina, but other infections can also affect these areas, such as sexually transmitted diseases like herpes, syphilis,
If you are having the symptoms for the first time, you should see your doctor without doing any self-treatment based on what you have read on the internet. Get it diagnosed. What is the cause? If you do self-treatment with nonprescription medications, it may compromise the evaluation. I highly recommend going to your primary care and getting it evaluated not to a blog or youtube channel that gives home remedies.
What will happen during the doctor visit? You will be asked a series of questions then have a speculum examination done to obtain a sample to do various tests on. Then a diagnosis is given and a treatment.
Let’s talk about the normal vulva and vagina:
The vulva contains hair follicles and sebaceous, sweat and apocrine glands. While the vagina does not have these things but is made up of nonkeratinized cells. The vagina is influenced by estrogen stimulation. After puberty, the vaginal tissues will react to estrogen and it will increase glycogen levels which will favor the growth of specific bacteria, lactobacilli, which are the good bacteria. They break down the glycogen into lactic acid and brings the pH at a range of 3.5 – 4.5. This pH level is normal after puberty and before menopause. So, if you test the vaginal pH and have anything above 4.5, this would be abnormal.
Discharges:
There are normal discharges from the vagina. So, do not freak out when you have a discharge. You can have mucus coming from the cervix, exudates from accessory glands, exfoliated squamous cells from the vaginal wall. It could lead to white or off-white color and provides an increased consistency. This is normal. The amount varies depending on many factors, which includes your hormones, hydration status, pregnancy, immunosuppression, and inflammation. Normal vaginal secretions do not have an odor. So, discharge can be normal, but if you ever have an odor — THIS IS NOT NORMAL. No, you won’t normally have a perfume like
Let’s talk about bacterial vaginosis.
This is due to low levels of the normal bacteria (lactobacilli) and an overgrowth of anaerobic organisms. I know this might be a bit much, but the lactobacilli (the good bacteria in the vagina) produce hydrogen peroxide that breaks down glycogen, which is produced by the vaginal tissues. This causes the pH low to be low (between 3.5-4.5). So, the normal vaginal pH should be between 3.5-4.5. And in bacterial vaginosis you have lower than normal amounts of the lactobacilli, the pH will be higher than normal. This causes overgrowth of the bad bacteria in the vagina. In
So, in BV you have abnormal gray discharge, pH level of greater than 4.5 and positive whiff test and presence of clue cells. They are treated with metronidazole oral or topical, or you can be treated with clindamycin. If you are pregnant, you can still be treated with these drugs as they are not teratogenic (these drugs won’t affect your pregnancy).
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis
This is caused by airborne fungi, 90% of it is Candida albicans. This is NOT an STI and they do not generally coexist with other infections. This is more likely to occur in pregnant women, patients on broad-spectrum antibiotics, diabetics, obese, immunosuppressed, those on OCP, those on corticosteroids. Wearing tight clothing or keeping a warm and moist environment can increase candida infection. the most common symptom is itching. But up to 20% of women are asymptomatic. Burning,
Trichomonas vulvovaginitis
This is an infection that is transmitted through sexual contact but can occur from fomites (poop) and
BV and trichomoniasis can be hard to distinguish so if you have symptoms, it is important to get it diagnosed. If it is