| Literature DB >> 23118494 |
Sujit D Rathod1, Jeffrey D Klausner, Karl Krupp, Arthur L Reingold, Purnima Madhivanan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vulvovaginal candidiasis is characterized by curd-like vaginal discharge and itching, and is associated with considerable health and economic costs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23118494 PMCID: PMC3478712 DOI: 10.1155/2012/859071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 1064-7449
Diagnostic criteria and treatment given for laboratory- and clinically-diagnosed gynecological conditions, Mysore, India 2005-2006.
| Diagnosis | Diagnostic criteria | Laboratory device | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Positive culture | InTray Colorex Yeast, BioMed Diagnostics, White City, OR, USA | None |
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| Vulvovaginal candidiasis | Positive culture for | 150 mg oral fluconazole, single dose | |
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| |||
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| Positive culture or positive saline wet mount microscopy | InPouch, BioMed Diagnostics, White City, OR, USA | 2 g oral metronidazole, single dose |
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| Bacterial vaginosis, laboratory | Score of 7–10 on Nugent criteria from Gram stain | None | |
| Intermediate flora, laboratory | Score of 4–6 on Nugent criteria from Gram stain | None | |
| Abnormal flora, laboratory | Score of 4–10 on Nugent criteria from Gram stain [ | None | |
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| |||
| Bacterial vaginosis, clinical | Positive on at least three of four Amsel criteria (elevated pH, positive whiff test, clue cells observed, discharge observed) [ | 400 mg oral metronidazole, bid for 7 days | |
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| Herpes simplex virus type 2 | Index value >1.1 on ELISA test of serum | Focus Technologies, Cypress, CA, USA | Acyclovir 400 mg tid for 7–10 days |
Prevalence of observed clinical signs, reported symptoms, and diagnosis (positive predictive value) of vulvovaginal candidiasis, Mysore, India 2005-2006.
| Vaginal sign observed or symptom reported | Prevalence ( | % prevalence | Diagnosed with vulvovaginal candidiasis | % diagnosed with vulvovaginal candidiasis (95% CI)** |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pruritis reported | 735 | 29.0 (26.8, 31.2) | 132 | 17.8 (14.8, 20.8) |
| Discharge reported | 782 | 31.0 (29.0, 32.9) | 122 | 15.3 (12.5, 18.1) |
| Erythema observed | 239 | 9.5 (8.2, 10.8) | 61 | 24.8 (18.7, 30.8) |
| Discharge observed | 894 | 35.4 (33.4, 37.5) | 162 | 17.6 (14.9, 20.3) |
| None | 887 | 35.1 (33.0, 37.2) | — | — |
| Any one | 916 | 36.2 (34.3, 38.1) | — | — |
| Any two | 492 | 19.5 (17.8, 21.1) | 84 | 16.7 (13.3, 20.1) |
| Any three | 182 | 7.2 (6.1, 8.3) | 75 | 40.1 (33.7, 47.9) |
| All four | 51 | 2.0 (1.4, 2.6) | 21 | 40.9 (27.6, 54.2) |
**Percentages and 95% confidence intervals calculated using generalized estimating equations, with binary family, identity link, and exchangeable correlation.
Prevalence of vulvovaginal candidiasis by sociodemographic, behavioral, partner, and laboratory measures, Mysore, India 2005-2006.
| Prevalent vulvovaginal candidiasis (Overall prevalence = 180/2528; 7.1%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence ( | Prevalence (%) | Prevalence 95% CI | |
| Age, years | |||
| 16–20 | 14/157 | 9.2 | (4.1, 14.3) |
| 21–25 | 72/978 | 7.4 | (5.4, 9.5) |
| 26–30 | 94/1391 | 6.6 | (5.2, 8.1) |
| Years of education | |||
| 0 | 44/666 | 6.6 | (4.3, 8.9) |
| 1–7 | 59/767 | 7.7 | (5.7, 9.7) |
| 8–17 | 77/1095 | 7.0 | (5.2, 8.8) |
| Years with sex partner | |||
| 0–6 | 55/728 | 7.5 | (5.3, 9.6) |
| 7–19 | 124/1794 | 6.9 | (5.6, 8.2) |
| Socioeconomic status*** | |||
| Low | 79/1257 | 6.3 | (4.8, 7.7) |
| High | 101/1271 | 7.9 | (6.1, 9.8) |
| Parity | |||
| No | 22/361 | 6.0 | (3.5, 8.5) |
| Yes | 158/2164 | 7.3 | (6.1, 8.5) |
| Religion* | |||
| Non-Muslim | 116/1805 | 6.4 | (5.1, 7.7) |
| Muslim | 64/721 | 8.9 | (6.5, 11.3) |
| Age of initiation of sexual activity, years** | |||
| <14 | 21/476 | 4.4 | (2.6, 6.3) |
| 15–18 | 110/1460 | 7.5 | (6.1, 9.0) |
| 19+ | 49/590 | 8.2 | (5.5, 11.0) |
| Number of vaginal sex acts in prior three months | |||
| 0–12 | 65/769 | 8.2 | (6.0, 10.5) |
| 13–120 | 115/1755 | 6.6 | (5.4, 7.8) |
| Ever had anal sex | |||
| No | 167/2358 | 7.1 | (5.9, 8.2) |
| Yes | 13/169 | 7.6 | (3.6, 11.5) |
| Husband has other sex partners | |||
| No | 167/2371 | 7.1 | (6.0, 8.2) |
| Yes | 13/157 | 7.8 | (3.3, 12.4) |
| Tubal ligation | |||
| No | 65/910 | 7.0 | (5.3, 8.8) |
| Yes | 115/1616 | 7.2 | (5.7, 8.6) |
| Herpes simplex virus type 2 infection | |||
| Negative | 156/2201 | 7.1 | (5.9, 8.3) |
| Positive | 24/327 | 6.9 | (4.0, 9.8) |
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| |||
| Negative | 169/2383 | 7.1 | (5.8, 8.3) |
| Positive | 11/145 | 8.0 | (3.4, 12.6) |
| Vaginal pH | |||
| <4.5 | 54/868 | 6.0 | (4.3, 7.7) |
| ≥4.5 | 126/1659 | 7.7 | (6.4, 9.0) |
| Clinical (Amsel) criteria diagnosis for bacterial vaginosis** | |||
| Negative | 145/2231 | 6.5 | (5.3, 7.6) |
| Positive | 35/296 | 12.0 | (8.2, 15.8) |
| Laboratory (Nugent) criteria diagnosis for bacterial vaginosis | |||
| Negative | 116/1633 | 6.9 | (5.6, 8.3) |
| Intermediate | 36/373 | 9.8 | (6.8, 12.8) |
| Positive | 21/391 | 5.7 | (3.1, 8.2) |
| Lactobacillus morphotypes detected* | |||
| ≥30 | 123/1594 | 7.5 | (6.0, 9.0) |
| 5–29 | 24/256 | 9.6 | (5.9, 13.3) |
| 1–4 | 4/118 | 3.7 | (0.3, 7.0) |
| <1 | 5/134 | 4.5 | (0.8, 8.2) |
| 0 | 16/291 | 5.5 | (2.6, 8.4) |
Prevalences, 95% confidence intervals and P values calculated using generalized estimating equations with binary family, identity link, and exchangeable correlation.
*0.05 ≤ P < 0.10.
∗∗ P < 0.05.
***A socioeconomic index was calculated using the first factor from a principle components analysis of household consumer goods, toilet type, financial instruments, and stove type, and then recoded into a binary score of low and high socioeconomic status [23].