vaginitis Flashcards
how do you diagnose BV?
Amsel’s criteria: 3 of 4
- white thin discharge
- 20% clue cells
- vaginal pH > 4.5
- positive whiff test
Nugent score 7-10
How do you diagnose trichomonas?
- microscopy (sensitivity 50-60%)
- NAAT preferred
- culture takes up to 5 days
How do you diagnose vulvovaginal candidiasis?
- microscopy: spores, hyphae, pseudohyphae
- yeast culture
- PCR is fast and sensitive but expensive
options for tx of BV?
- metronidazole 500 mg PO BID x 7d
- metronidazole gel 0.75% qday x 5 days
- clindamycin cream 2% IV x 7 days
alternative:
- tinidazole
- secindazole
- PO clinda
- clinda ovules
CDC recommends STD and HIV testing if treating for BV
tx for trichomonas?
- po metronidazole 500 mg BID x 7 days
- retest in 3 months
alternative tinidazole 2 g x 1
what is classification for clinical candidiasis?
- uncomplicated
- complicated A) recurrent (4 or more in a year) B) severe symptoms C) immunocompromised D) non C. albicans strain
tx of uncomplicated candidiasis?
OTC vs Rx options
OTC:
clomitrazol cream (all 5 g) 3-7 days
miconazole suppositories (100-1200)
Rx:
teroconazole cream or suppository
PO fluconazole 150 mg x 1
tx for uncomplicated candidiasis?
recurrent:
- weekly 150 mg PO fluconazole x 6 months
- vag clomitrazole 500 mg weekly, 200 mg biweekly
severe sx:
- intravaginal azole for 10-14 days
- 2-3 doses of PO fluconazole 3 days apart
non-albicans/resistant
- boric acid 600 mg capsules intra-vag x 14 days
- flucytosine but too expensive
misc things to remember
- OTC okay, but counsel on mild reactions
- empiric tx not recommended
- pap smear not reliable way to diagnose vaginitis
clinical signs and diagnosis of desquamative vaginitis? tx?
- pruritis, vaginal discharge, perimenopause
- erythema/firey red on exam. discharge +
- microscopy: increased parabasal cells, PMNs. 1:1 epithelial to inflammatory cells.
- no formal guidelines for tx available: intravaginal clinda vs steroids