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[Clinical characteristics of aerobic vaginitis and its mixed infections]. | LitMetric

[Clinical characteristics of aerobic vaginitis and its mixed infections].

Zhonghua Fu Chan Ke Za Zhi

Department of Gynecology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, Tianjin 300052, China.

Published: December 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze the clinical features of aerobic vaginitis (AV) and its mixed infections for better diagnosis.
  • From April to December 2008, 516 patients were assessed, revealing that 14.7% had AV, often in combination with other infections like bacterial vaginosis (BV), vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), and trichomonal vaginitis (TV).
  • The findings highlighted that common symptoms of AV included yellow vaginal discharge and higher vaginal pH, while mixed infections often presented atypical symptoms, emphasizing the need for thorough diagnosis in patients with vaginal infections.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate clinical characteristics of aerobic vaginitis (AV) and its mixed infections for diagnosis efficiently.

Methods: From April 2008 to December 2008, 516 patients with vaginitis treated in Tianjin Medical University General Hospital were enrolled in this study. AV, bacterial vaginosis (BV), vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), trichomonal vaginitis (TV), and cytolytic vaginosis (CV) were diagnosed based on symptoms, sign and vaginal discharge examination.

Results: Among 516 cases, AV cases were found in 14.7% (76/516), and AV was common vaginal infection. AV mixed infections was diagnosed in 58% (44/76), including mixed with BV (45%, 20/44), mixed with VVC (30%, 13/44), and mixed with TV (25%, 11/44). Those common symptom of AV were yellow vaginal discharge (63%, 20/32), more vaginal discharge (44%, 14/32). Vaginal pH value was usually more than 4.5 (84%, 27/32). Vaginal cleanliness mainly was grade III - IV (88%, 28/32). Six cases with enterococcus faecium and 4 cases with streptococci were frequently isolated. The symptom and sign of mixed AV infection was atypical.

Conclusions: Aerobic vaginitis is a common lower vaginal infection and easily mixed with other pathogens, especially with BV, VVC or TV. When patients were diagnosed with AV or other vaginal infection, it should be mentioned whether those patients have mixed vaginal infection or AV.

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