Our study was powered primarily to look at the influence of bacterial vaginosis rather than chlamydial infection on miscarriage. |
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The most common types of vaginitis are bacterial vaginosis, yeast infections, and trichomoniasis. |
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Women with bacterial vaginosis have a broad spectrum of clinical presentations. |
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Asymptomatic bacteriuria, gonococcal cervicitis and bacterial vaginosis are strongly associated with preterm delivery. |
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These are likely to be unhelpful to women with bacterial vaginosis because the lactobacilli are directed at the wrong anatomical site and are of the wrong kind. |
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Bacterial vaginosis, candidal vaginitis, and trichomonal vaginitis are uncommon among postmenopausal women but may occur in those with risk factors. |
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A recent study found that women with an infection called bacterial vaginosis were nine times more likely to have a miscarriage than uninfected women. |
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Bacterial vaginosis is not a sexually transmitted infection. |
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Bacterial vaginosis in sexually experienced and nonsexually experienced young women entering the military. |
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Correlation of local interleukin-8 with immunoglobulin A against hemolysin and with prolidase and sialidase levels in women with bacterial vaginosis. |
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Today vaginosis is recognized with more accuracy in the microbiology laboratory by Gram stain evaluation rather than by culture, which can often be inconclusive. |
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