Publications
| Title | Abstract | Year Filter | PMID(sorted ascending) Filter |
|---|
| treatment of clue cell-positive discharge with 200 mg povidone-iodine pessaries. a double-blind and placebo-controlled trial. | in a double-blind randomized study we evaluated the efficacy of povidone-iodine in the treatment of clue cell-positive discharge (ccpd). vaginal pessaries (200 mg povidone-iodine or placebo) were taken twice daily for five consecutive days. although the regimen was reasonably well accepted, 'messiness' was reported by 13 of 33 women (39%). of 44 women enrolled, treatment efficacy was evaluated in 28 women who had both follow-up visits. there was no significant difference in the efficacy of povid ... | 1987 | 3556257 |
| susceptibility of mobiluncus species to 23 antimicrobial agents and 15 other compounds. | the susceptibility of 12 strains of mobiluncus curtisii and 10 strains of m. mulieris to 23 antimicrobial agents and 15 other compounds was determined. all strains were susceptible to chloramphenicol, clindamycin, rifampin, tobramycin, vancomycin, virginiamycin, and all beta-lactam antibiotics tested, including imipenem. one strain of m. mulieris was resistant to erythromycin and josamycin. all were resistant to colistin, cycloserine, nalidixic acid, and neomycin. tetracycline had variable activ ... | 1987 | 3566250 |
| infection with multiple sexually transmitted agents. | a patient named as a contact by an individual with gonorrhea and syphilis was found to be an asymptomatic carrier of seven organisms known to be transmitted sexually. cultures were positive for neisseria gonorrhoeae, chlamydia trachomatis, gardnerella vaginalis, mycoplasma hominis, ureaplasma urealyticum, and herpes simplex virus. trichomonas vaginalis was detected by a wet preparation and the papanicolaou smear. the cervix was found to have an ulcer on the posterior lip that yielded herpes simp ... | 1987 | 3573062 |
| controlled evaluation of modified radiometric blood culture medium supplemented with gelatin for detection of bacteremia and fungemia. | although the addition of 1.2% gelatin to broth blood culture media containing sodium polyanetholesulfonate has been shown to enhance detection of certain bacteria, including neisseria meningitidis, n. gonorrhoeae, peptostreptococcus anaerobius, and gardnerella vaginalis, the effect of such supplementation on the detection of other microorganisms causing bacteremia and fungemia is not known. therefore, we studied bactec 6b medium with and without gelatin in 6,833 paired comparisons to examine the ... | 1987 | 3624437 |
| polymicrobial early postpartum endometritis with facultative and anaerobic bacteria, genital mycoplasmas, and chlamydia trachomatis: treatment with piperacillin or cefoxitin. | a protected, triple-lumen transcervical culture method was used to recover organisms from the endometrium. at least one facultative or one anaerobic species of bacteria was recovered from 82% of the patients, and genital mycoplasmas were recovered from 76% of the women with endometritis. bacteria together with genital mycoplasmas were present in 61% of the women, bacteria alone were present in 20%, genital mycoplasmas alone were present in 16%, and chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from 2% of t ... | 1986 | 3701114 |
| endometrial cultures obtained by a triple-lumen method from afebrile and febrile postpartum women. | transfundal endometrial cultures obtained from afebrile women who delivered vaginally were uniformly free of bacteria and contained ureaplasma urealyticum in only 2 of 14 women. a protected triple-lumen transcervical method to obtain an endometrial culture recovered organisms from 6 (43%) of the 14 women. compared with cultures from afebrile women, organisms were recovered from 51 (93%) of 55 febrile postpartum women by using the triple-lumen transcervical culture method (p less than .001). amon ... | 1986 | 3701115 |
| comparison of oral and vaginal metronidazole therapy for nonspecific bacterial vaginosis. | a prospective, randomized, nonblind study was performed to compare the efficacy of a 7-day vaginal regimen with 500 mg metronidazole (flagyl) once a day and that of oral treatment with 400 mg metronidazole twice daily for 7 days in the treatment of nonspecific bacterial vaginosis. no treatment was given to the sexual partners and there was no restriction of sexual intercourse. 38 women completed the study and at follow-up after 4 weeks, women receiving vaginal therapy had a cure rate of 79% comp ... | 1986 | 3710287 |
| quantitative studies of vaginal bacteria. | a quantitative method of culture, based on a weighed sample and with results expressed as colony forming units (cfu)/g was assessed and used to investigate the vaginal flora of normal women and that of women with vaginal disease. samples were collected by means of disposable plastic loops into modified proteose peptone water transport medium in preweighed bottles. counts expressed as cfu/g of secretion were consistent, whereas counts expressed as cfu/ml were inconsistent. results obtained with s ... | 1986 | 3733086 |
| bacterial vaginosis treated with metronidazole. effects on the vaginal microbiology by a single dose versus a five days regimen. | the microbiological vaginal flora was studied in 42 women with clinical findings consistent with the concept bacterial vaginosis (bv). the women and their consorts were treated with metronidazole (flagyl), either a single dose of 2,000 mg or 400 mg three times daily for five days. effect of treatment was assessed four weeks after its initiation. clinical cure was attained in more than 80% of the cases and was the same irrespective of treatment. the microbiologic flora changed by treatment in dir ... | 1986 | 3765938 |
| tetracycline resistance and tetm in pathogenic urogenital bacteria. | clinical isolates of gardnerella vaginalis, streptococcus agalactiae, bacteroides spp., and mobiluncus spp. were screened for resistance to tetracycline and for the presence of the streptococcal tetm determinant. the s. agalactiae and g. vaginalis strains contained dna sequences homologous to the tetm determinant, while strains of the other two genera did not. | 1986 | 3800360 |
| significant bacteremia associated with replacement of intrauterine contraceptive device. | blood culture samples were taken from 23 women at different stages when an intrauterine contraceptive device was replaced. transient bacteremia resulting from vaginal organisms was found in 13% of women 4 to 6 minutes after insertion of the new device. previous reports have failed to demonstrate bacteremia associated with either first insertion or removal of intrauterine contraceptive device. our results show that replacement of an intrauterine contraceptive device, a more traumatic procedure, c ... | 1987 | 3826221 |
| a retrospective study of doxycycline in the treatment of genitourinary infections. | a retrospective study was conducted to assess the prevalence of chlamydia trachomatis, ureaplasma ureolyticum, and mycoplasma sp in patients with suspected genital infection, and to assess the efficacy of doxycycline and other current antibiotic therapies. over a three-year period, 1,048 records of patients (64% female; 36% male) were reviewed. c trachomatis, u ureolyticum, or mycoplasma hominis was found in 39% of the men and 49% of the women. other pathogens included gardnerella vaginalis (in ... | 1986 | 3829089 |
| [bacterial vaginitis. microbiology, diagnosis, therapy and complications]. | 1985 | 3871690 | |
| vaginal infection with gardnerella vaginalis. | 1985 | 3871942 | |
| vaginitis due to gardnerella vaginalis and to candida albicans in sexual abuse. | sexually transmitted diseases may be transferred to children and adolescents during voluntary or involuntary sexual contact. two children are reported with the unusual association of sexual abuse and candida albicans or gardnerella vaginalis infections. awareness of the techniques for diagnosis of these infections is essential for appropriate management of the abused child. these organisms should not be considered normal flora when found in symptomatic children and adolescents and should raise t ... | 1985 | 3872154 |
| treatment of gardnerella vaginalis vaginitis. | 1985 | 3872155 | |
| anaerobes and gardnerella vaginalis in non-specific vaginitis. | clinical evidence of bacterial vaginosis was present in 25 (35%) of 72 patients attending a london venereology clinic and correlated significantly with abnormal organic acids in vaginal secretions (24/25), with gardnerella vaginalis on culture (17/25), with complaints of vaginal malodour (15/25), and with a relative scarcity of white blood cells in vaginal secretions. anaerobic vaginal flora were presumptively identified by gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of organic acids found in vaginal se ... | 1985 | 3872256 |
| carriage of gardnerella vaginalis and anaerobes in semen. | gardnerella vaginalis was isolated from 22 (38%) of 58 semen samples obtained from men attending an infertility clinic. counts ranged from 1.2 x 10(3) to greater than 10(7) colony forming units (cfu)/ml. there was no association between the isolation of g vaginalis and the sperm count. twenty (34.4%) samples contained non-sporing anaerobes and nine (15.5%) both anaerobes and g vaginalis. the infective dose of g vaginalis is not known, but semen could act as a medium for its sexual transmission. | 1985 | 3872257 |
| single-dose metronidazole for gardnerella vaginalis. | 1985 | 3872426 | |
| hemophilus influenzae in urine. | 1985 | 3872646 | |
| [gardnerella vaginitis]. | 1985 | 3873117 | |
| colistin-oxolinic acid blood agar: a selective medium for the isolation of gardnerella vaginalis. | colistin-oxolinic acid medium is proposed as a selective isolation medium for gardnerella vaginalis. the medium is effective in inhibiting staphylococci and gram-negative bacteria while allowing growth of g. vaginalis. | 1985 | 3873471 |
| vaginitis. | vaginitis is one of the most common complaints of women in the united states today. about 90% of patients with this problem suffer from infection of the vagina caused by candida, gardnerella, or trichomonas. the diagnosis and effective treatment of these common infections depend on accurate identification of the entity, effective specific therapy, and restoration of the normal ecosystem of the vagina. at the same time women should be made aware that not all discharge means infection and that any ... | 1985 | 3873872 |
| identification of gardnerella vaginalis with the api 20 strep system. | a total of 137 strains of gardnerella vaginalis were examined by the api 20 strep system. the system was shown to be reliable when the tests were compared with standard identification methods, and very little confusion occurred with streptococcal profiles; consequently, g. vaginalis has been included in the api 20 strep data base. | 1985 | 3874213 |
| gardnerella vaginalis in urinary tract infections of immunocompromised patients. | 1985 | 3874777 | |
| gardnerella vaginalis & associated aerobic bacteria in nonspecific vaginitis. | 1985 | 3874825 | |
| phagocytosis and killing of gardnerella vaginalis by human neutrophils. | gardnerella vaginalis was ingested and killed by neutrophils in the presence of normal human serum. heat inactivation of the serum inhibited these processes. the opsonisation of some but not all g vaginalis strains was enhanced by immune rabbit serum. immune serum did not, however, enhance intracellular killing. blockade of the classical pathway of complement activation had no effect on the opsonic activity of human serum. these results suggest that the opsonisation, phagocytosis, and killing of ... | 1985 | 3874884 |
| laboratory identification of sexually transmitted diseases. | laboratory methods are used for the rapid identification of nine sexually transmitted diseases. some problems are inherent in those methods. alternate approaches can be used in the laboratory. | 1985 | 3874959 |
| importance of differential diagnosis in acute vaginitis. | acute vaginitis is one of the most common diseases seen in the practice of office gynecology. large survey studies of women with lower genital tract symptoms suggestive of vaginitis have demonstrated the presence of three major etiologic categories in acute vaginitis: (1) nonspecific vaginosis (gardnerella vaginalis), (2) vulvovaginal candidiasis (candida albicans), and (3) trichomoniasis (trichomonas vaginalis). effective treatment of acute vaginitis requires that an accurate diagnosis be estab ... | 1985 | 3875290 |
| [amine colpitis]. | 1985 | 3876973 | |
| vaginal discharge and gardnerella vaginalis. predisposing factors. | a total of 284 women in the reproductive years with vaginal discharge from which only gardnerella vaginalis (gv) had been isolated, entered a questionnaire study on the possible causal relation between presence of gv and type of menstrual hygiene, type of contraception, number of deliveries, infertility and number of sexual partners. a control group consisted of 225 women without vaginal discharge. the study showed that patients with gv significantly more frequently used tampons for menstrual hy ... | 1985 | 3877329 |
| microbiology of the lower genital tract in postmenarchal adolescent girls: differences by sexual activity, contraception, and presence of nonspecific vaginitis. | the prevalence of selected microorganisms in the lower genital tract in postmenarchal adolescent girls was assessed, including vaginal gardnerella vaginalis, group b streptococcus, lactobacillus, mycoplasma species, ureaplasma urealyticum, staphylococcus aureus, and yeast, and endocervical mycoplasma species, u. urealyticum, chlamydia trachomatis, neisseria gonorrhoeae, and trichomonas vaginalis. specific attention was focused on important sexually transmitted disease organisms, and differences ... | 1985 | 3877803 |
| predictive value of the "clue cells" investigation and the amine volatilization test in vaginal infections caused by gardnerella vaginalis. | although still controversial, an etiologic role of gardnerella vaginalis is imputed in vaginitis. besides isolation of the organism by culture, two alternative diagnostic procedures have been claimed to be useful: the investigation of "clue cells" in clinical specimens and the amine volatilization test or fishy odor perception in genital secretions. herein we report on the findings of the simultaneous use of g. vaginalis isolation, the clue cell test and amine volatilization perception in specim ... | 1985 | 3878365 |
| comparison of two different metronidazole regimens in the treatment of gardnerella vaginalis infection with or without trichomoniasis. | gardnerella vaginalis infection confirmed by culture was treated either by a 2 g dose or divided doses of metronidazole in 100 and 200 female patients respectively. both dosages were equally effective. we recommend a single dose of 2 g metronidazole in the treatment of gard. vaginalis infection, particularly when association with trichomoniasis is confirmed or suspected. | 1985 | 3879249 |
| isolation of gardnerella vaginalis from high vaginal swabs. | vaginal swabs from 2715 consecutive unselected women with vaginal discharge were examined for gardnerella vaginalis, candida albicans and trichomonas vaginalis. of 2715 women, 2043 had non-specific vaginitis and g. vaginalis was isolated from 269 cases (13.2%). thirty five of the strains were isolated together with c. albicans, eight with t. vaginalis, six with bacteroides species and three each with group b streptococcus and staphylococcus aureus. two hundred and sixteen (80%) of the isolates w ... | 1985 | 3879398 |
| a case of conjunctivitis in a neonate due to gardnerella vaginalis. | a case of conjunctivitis in a neonate caused by gardnerella vaginalis is described. the diagnosis was confirmed by examination of a gram-stained smear, isolation of the organism from the conjunctival swab, and also by response to treatment with chloramphenicol. the organism was probably derived from the mother's birth canal during delivery and the early rupture of membrane might be the predisposing factor. | 1985 | 3879399 |
| [clinical, diagnostic and management aspects in vulvovaginitis and pelvic inflammatory disease]. | 1985 | 3879641 | |
| [antimicrobial activity of nifuratel]. | 1985 | 3879754 | |
| gardnerella vaginalis: genitourinary pathogen in men. | 1985 | 3883630 | |
| [amine colpitis, not only an esthetic problem: increased infection risk in labor]. | in 76 women with non-specific vaginitis we could always isolate gardnerella vaginalis and several anaerobics, especially bacteroides species, in hgh counts. in 19 puerperae, bacteriologial examinations of the infected episiotomy wound yielded a spectrum of pathogens similar to that of non-specific vaginitis. in 74 per cent of the women with wound infection following episiotomy, non-specific vaginitis had either already been present before childbirth (and identified as gardnerella vaginalis vagin ... | 1985 | 3884431 |
| non-specific vaginitis: diagnostic features and response to imidazole therapy (metronidazole, ornidazole). | detailed quantitative aerobic, anaerobic, fungal and mycoplasma flora was obtained for 43 women presenting with complaints of vaginal discharge and malodour. clinical response was associated with eradication of the abnormal anaerobic flora, despite persistence of g vaginalis in nine (26%). topical imidazole therapy appeared to have some advantage over oral therapy. gram stains of vaginal swabs were found to be the most useful laboratory investigation. | 1985 | 3887255 |
| problems in specimen collection for sexually transmitted diseases. | laboratory methods for the diagnosis of sexually transmitted diseases (stds) are continuously undergoing improvement. it remains the responsibility of the clinician to become familiar with the tests available for the diagnosis of stds. those tests depend on obtaining clinical specimens from the proper site and on transporting them to the laboratory under satisfactory conditions. | 1985 | 3894659 |
| comparison of single-dose vs one-week course of metronidazole for symptomatic bacterial vaginosis. | in a prospective, single-blind, randomized study, a single 2-g dose of metronidazole was compared with a seven-day course of 500 mg given twice daily in the treatment of symptomatic vaginal discharge associated with gardnerella vaginalis. based on resolution of symptoms and on cultures negative for g vaginalis, 86% (40/46) of women treated with the single dose and 97% (35/36) of women treated with the seven-day course were considered cured at seven to ten days after treatment. evaluation at 21 d ... | 1985 | 3894707 |
| moxalactam versus clindamycin plus tobramycin in the treatment of obstetric and gynecologic infections. | the clinical efficacy of moxalactam versus clindamycin/tobramycin was evaluated in a comparative, randomized, prospective study. sixty patients were treated: 30 with moxalactam and 30 with clindamycin/tobramycin. there were 15 cases of tuboovarian abscess, 36 cases of severe pelvic inflammatory disease with peritonitis, eight cases of endomyometritis, and one wound abscess. aerobic and anaerobic cultures from the sites of infection yielded 441 microorganisms from 53 patients; an average of 8.3 b ... | 1985 | 3895947 |
| an office laboratory panel to assess vaginal problems. | in determining the cause of vaginal complaints, the routine use of four simple tests ("the vagina panel") enables the physician to identify pathogens (candida, gardnerella, trichomonas), pathologic processes (inflammation, estrogen deficiency) and, in most instances, a healthy vagina. time and money are saved. the specimens can be collected in one minute during a pelvic examination. the panel can provide the answers to eight essential questions in two minutes of observer time, with supplies cost ... | 1985 | 3898791 |
| the treatment of gardnerella vaginalis vaginosis: a randomized comparison of pivampicillin with metronidazole. | the efficacy of pivampicillin and metronidazole were compared in the treatment of gardnerella vaginalis associated bacterial vaginosis. in a multicenter trial 86 women were given pivampicillin (p) 700 mg twice daily for 6 days and 86 women received metronidazole (m) 400 mg three times daily for 7 days. at control, 2 weeks from the start of treatment, patients in group p showed the best clinical results, 77.9% in group p vs. 64.0% in group m (p = 0.066). p showed a higher clinical efficacy than m ... | 1985 | 3898976 |
| diagnostic value of clinical examination, direct microscopy, and culture in the gardnerella vaginalis syndrome. | in a general practice 467 women aged 15-49 years with vaginal discharge were consecutively examined in order to compare the diagnostic value in the gardnerella vaginalis syndrome of the clinical examination, direct microscopy of the vaginal secretion, and culture. we found significant correlations between all relevant combinations of the diagnostic methods. the predictive value of a positive test for the clinical examination, the microscopy, and the clinical examination combined with microscopy, ... | 1985 | 3903905 |
| treatment of the gardnerella vaginalis syndrome. a controlled, double-blind study comparing pivampicillin and metronidazole. | a double-blind, randomized, therapeutic study was carried out in 289 patients with vaginal discharge and growth of gardnerella vaginalis (gv) and no growth of neisseria gonorrhoeae, trichomonas vaginalis or candida. treatment consisted of either pivampicillin (pondocillin), 700 mg twice daily for seven days, or metronidazole, 500 mg twice daily for seven days. the effect was evaluated on the basis of the patient's statement and on the result of culture for gv immediately after end of treatment. ... | 1985 | 3903906 |
| in-vitro and in-vivo activity of metronidazole against gardnerella vaginalis, bacteroides spp. and mobiluncus spp. in bacterial vaginosis. | an open, randomized, culture-controlled clinical study was designed to compare the efficacy of a single 2 g dose of metronidazole (elyzol) with standard 7-day therapy in the treatment of bacterial vaginosis (bv). forty-one of 47 (87%) patients given the single dose and 30 of 33 (91%) given the 7-day treatment were found to be cured seven days after treatment. at final assessment, 24 of 34 (71%) patients given the single dose and 22 of 28 (79%) given the 7-day treatment remained cured. the two re ... | 1985 | 3905748 |
| [detection of gardnerella vaginalis in the pathogen spectrum of sexually transmissible diseases in vulvovaginitis]. | gardnerella vaginalis, a sexually transmittable organism, is regarded as the indicator of the so-called "non-specific vaginitis". the isolation rate of g. vaginalis from 72 women attending our out-patient department during one year because of urogenital complaints was higher in pretreated than in untreated patients. in genital swabs taken from untreated patients, g. vaginalis could be isolated only in 17%, whereas this was observed in 38% of the specimens from women pretreated with various antim ... | 1985 | 3907172 |
| [bacterial vaginosis]. | 1985 | 3907521 | |
| adhesion of gardnerella vaginalis to vaginal epithelial cells: variables affecting adhesion and inhibition by metronidazole. | variables affecting the adherence of gardnerella vaginalis to human vaginal epithelial cells were examined in vitro. adherence depended on ph, with maximum attachment occurring between ph 5 and ph 6. preincubation of the bacteria at 56 degrees c for 30 minutes and ultraviolet irradiation resulted in a noticeable decrease in adherence. in contrast, adherence was not altered by preincubating the epithelial cells under these conditions. periodate oxidation of the vaginal cells caused an appreciable ... | 1985 | 3910547 |
| [pelvic inflammatory disease and nonspecific vaginitis]. | 1985 | 3911475 | |
| evaluation of gas-liquid chromatography for the rapid diagnosis of amniotic fluid infection: a preliminary report. | gas-liquid chromatography has been proposed as a possible tool in the rapid diagnosis of amniotic fluid infections. the analysis is based on the identification of specific organic acids derived from bacterial metabolism when organisms are present within the amniotic fluid. we retrospectively subjected 69 samples of amniotic fluid which had been obtained by transabdominal amniocentesis to analysis by gas-liquid chromatography. forty-seven samples were derived from patients who either were in prem ... | 1985 | 3922227 |
| [gardnerella vaginalis in routine cultures of material from the genital region]. | 1985 | 3923372 | |
| [isolation and identification of gardnerella vaginalis]. | thirty-four strains of gardnerella vaginalis were studied. they were isolated from non specific vaginitis. a presumptive identification can be based on colonial morphology, gram stain characteristics, negative catalase and oxidase test. the differentiation of gardnerella vaginalis from other negative catalase coccobacilli is based on the acid formation of carbohydrates, enzymatic test, analysis of short chain volatile and non volatile end products of fermentation in glc. all gardnerella strains ... | 1985 | 3931038 |
| [prevalence of 7 microorganisms in abnormal vaginal secretions (vaginitis)]. | seven microorganisms (n. gonorrhoeae, c. albicans, t. vaginalis, g. vaginalis, m. hominis, u. urealyticum and streptococcus of group b) have been assayed in genital samplings of 164 asymptomatic women (control group) and of 374 women suffering from abnormal vaginal secretions (vaginitis group). all these bacteria except group b streptococci were isolated in the vaginitis group more frequently than in the control group (p less than 0.01). the proportion of negative cultures for all tested bacteri ... | 1985 | 3934750 |
| in vitro adherence of lactobacillus species to vaginal epithelial cells. | because of the reported use of yogurt douches for the treatment of vaginitis, the adherence of lactobacillus species to normal human vaginal epithelial cells was tested by in vitro methods. l. acidophilus and l. bulgaricus isolated from three commercial yogurts were compared to l. acidophilus, l. fermentum, l. cellobiosus, and l. casei isolated from clinical specimens and from american type culture collection cultures. l. acidophilus isolated from lactinex tablets was also tested. no significant ... | 1985 | 3934974 |
| reverse camp phenomenon of gardnerella vaginalis (a note). | gardnerella vaginalis strains inhibit the haemolysis by listeria monocytogenes on human blood agar incubated in 5-10% co2 atmosphere or under anaerobic conditions. | 1985 | 3939073 |
| clinical comparison of an agar slide blood culture bottle with tryptic soy broth and a conventional blood culture bottle with supplemented peptone broth. | the roche septi-chek biphasic blood culture system with tryptic soy broth was compared with a conventional blood culture bottle with supplemented peptone broth in 6,956 paired blood cultures from adult patients. both systems were inoculated with equal volumes of blood (5 ml) and incubated aerobically (vented) for 2 weeks. more clinically important bacteria and fungi, including staphylococcus aureus, s. epidermidis, escherichia coli and other enterobacteriaceae, pseudomonas aeruginosa, and candid ... | 1985 | 3998116 |
| nonspecific vaginitis following sexual abuse in children. | nonspecific vaginitis, one of the most common causes of vaginitis in adults, is a polymicrobial infection in which vaginal anaerobes act synergistically with gardnerella vaginalis. the diagnosis is made by examination of the vaginal secretions for clue cells, the development of a fishy odor after the addition of 10% koh to vaginal secretions, and a vaginal ph greater than 4.5. to determine whether nonspecific vaginitis occurs in sexually abused children, we obtained vaginal washes from 31 abused ... | 1985 | 4000776 |
| [etiology of bacterial vaginosis (non-specific vaginitis)]. | 56 women who were diagnosed bioclinically as having a bacterial vaginal infection were studied, as were 35 women as a control group. the study was a semi-quantitative analysis of the vaginal bacterial flora, both aerobic and anaerobic. it shows that gardnerella vaginalis and anaerobic bacteria such as peptococcus, peptostreptococcus, bacteroïdes, veillonella and mobiluncus were associated in a statistically significant way with bacterial vaginitis. on the other hand lactobacilli were less freque ... | 1985 | 4078248 |
| fine structure of haemophilus vaginalis. | haemophilus vaginalis 594 has a trilaminar cell wall, ribosomes, a fibrillar nucleoid, and both convoluted and simple mesosome-like bodies. polar bulbous enlargements of the cell and multiple cross wall formations may explain its pleomorphism. | 1972 | 4110152 |
| analysis of corynebacterium vaginale by an immunodiffusion technique. | an immunodiffusion technique was employed to study the antigenic relationship of corynebacterium vaginale isolates, vaginal diphtheroids, and members of the genera corynebacterium and lactobacillus. antisera were prepared against c. vaginale atcc strain 14018 grown diphasically and on blood agar plates and were tested against extracts of organisms prepared by sonication. ouchterlony analysis demonstrated that all of the isolates of c. vaginale examined possess a common antigenic determinant. no ... | 1974 | 4132956 |
| reply to letter. the possibility of diagnosing lower genital tract infections with corynebacterium vaginale by means of wet mounts and stained smears. | 1974 | 4135749 | |
| letter: diagnosing corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis) by means of wet mounts and direct stained smears. | 1974 | 4136152 | |
| a study and new description of corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis). | 1970 | 4190441 | |
| indirect fluorescent-antibody method for the identification of corynebacterium vaginale. | the indirect fluorescent-antibody technique was employed in an attempt to develop a rapid method of identification of corynebacterium vaginale. six reference strains and ten clinical isolates selected on the basis of morphology and conventional biochemical tests were compared. antisera were prepared in rabbits against the six reference strains. the most satisfactory antiserum was that prepared using strain 14018 grown diphasically (14018 di) as the antigen. certain of the antisera did exhibit a ... | 1973 | 4197767 |
| isolation and identification of corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis) in women with infections of the lower genital tract. | 1974 | 4206321 | |
| removal of an unusual foreign body from the peritoneal cavity via laparoscopy: report of a case. | this is a case report of a patient who, while undergoing laparoscopic salpingectomy, also had removed from the peritoneal cavity the distal half of a foley catheter left from an induced abortion 6 years previously. lower abdominal discomfort had been complained of for several years. a haemophilus vaginalis infection responded to tetracline therapy. at the time of laparoscopy no abnormal signs or symptoms were noted. on viewing the pelvic viscera through the laparoscope the distal half of the ... | 1974 | 4279075 |
| management of patients with vaginal infections. an invitational symposium. | a guest faculty discussed the management of patients with vaginal infections. it was agreed that correct diagnosis is necessary before therapy. diagnosis can be accomplished by a microscopic examination in 90% of the cases. the cytologic smear is also very important. specific culture media may be useful for troublesome cases, for instance, blood agar fo haemophilus vaginalis, trichocel medium for trichiomonas vaginalis, neckerson's medium for candidal species and thayer-martin for neisseria ... | 1972 | 4343029 |
| vaginal flora and sperm survival. | a study was undertaken to clarify the concept of coitus-induced change in vaginal flora. instead, evidence was found on the relation between vaginal flora and sperm survival. the presence of spermatozoa was recorded in 300 pap smears of menstruant women taken within 7 days of, and in the same menstrual cycle as, coitus, in which no contraception had been used and the ejaculate had been deposited into the vagina. the smears were selected to show either a vaginal doderlein or haemophilus type f ... | 1974 | 4449105 |
| corynebacterium vaginale. an analysis of 68 isolations. | 1972 | 4500536 | |
| puerperal fever with haemophilus vaginalis septicemia. | 1973 | 4579912 | |
| haemophilus vaginalis--further investigations into its identity. | 1974 | 4615155 | |
| ampicillin therapy for corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis) vaginitis. | 1973 | 4688580 | |
| [joint occurrence of haemophilus vaginalis and pplo in the vagina]. | 1967 | 4873315 | |
| incidence of haemophilus vaginalis. | 1969 | 4885536 | |
| haemophilus vaginalis: vaginitis by inoculation from culture. | 1969 | 4886951 | |
| identification of haemophilus vaginalis. | 1969 | 4897326 | |
| method for isolation and identification of corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis). | a method for the clinical isolation and recognition of corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis) is presented. wet mount and stained characteristics of genital tract discharges, cellular and colonial morphology of the bacilli, inhibition by h(2)o(2), lack of a catalase, and fermentation of particular carbohydrates are the determinant factors. the method enables differentiation of the species from unclassified diphtheroids common to the genitourinary tract. | 1970 | 4905949 |
| in vitro effects of furazolidone on the fine structure of haemophilus vaginalis. | 1970 | 4952571 | |
| an electron microscope study of thin sections of haemophilus vaginalis (gardner and dukes) and some possibly related species. | 1966 | 4960378 | |
| relative incidence of corynebacterium vaginale (haemophilus vaginalis), neisseria gonorrhoeae, and trichomonas spp. among women attending a venereal disease clinic. | 1970 | 4988098 | |
| haemophilus vaginalis 594, a gram-negative organism? | 1971 | 4999344 | |
| corynebacterium vaginale vaginitis. review of the literature and presentation of data based on vaginal cultures from 1,008 patients. | a partial review of past investigations concerning vaginitis associated with corynebacterium vaginale (formerly known as haemophilus vaginalis) includes therapy, laboratory diagnosis and taxonomy. an investigation involving 1008 patients during a 6 week postpartum period evaluated several hypotheses. it was found that the incidence of positive cultures was greater in nonpregnant patients with vaginitis when compared with the whole population; the positive culture rate was s ignificantly higher ... | 1972 | 5007511 |
| corynebacterium vaginale vaginitis in pregnant women. | 1971 | 5122618 | |
| growth requirements of haemophilus vaginalis. | 1969 | 5310441 | |
| volatile and cellular fatty acids of haemophilus vaginalis. | the major volatile acid produced by haemophilus vaginalis was acetic acid. the absence of propionate, butyrate, and cellular branched-chain fatty acids indicates that h. vaginalis is not related to propionibacterium or butyribacterium. | 1969 | 5344117 |
| a study of haemophilus vaginalis gardner and dukes. | 1969 | 5353147 | |
| diagnosis of haemophilus vaginalis by papanicolaou smears. | 1969 | 5385304 | |
| [lymecycline in haemophilus vaginalis colpitis]. | 1971 | 5560747 | |
| [infection of urogenital organs by haemophilus vaginalis]. | 1967 | 5620494 | |
| identification of haemophilus vaginalis. | 1968 | 5646422 | |
| [incidence of haemophilus vaginalis infection]. | 1968 | 5668830 | |
| [significance of haemophilus vaginalis in chronic nonspecific colpitis]. | 1969 | 5809762 | |
| characterization of haemophilus vaginalis, corynebacterium cervicis, and related bacteria. | 1969 | 5816336 | |
| [contribution to the study of vaginitis due to haemophilus vaginalis]. | 1965 | 5842673 | |
| bacterial flora in abnormalities of the female genital tract. | the bacterial flora associated with certain common abnormalities of the female genital tract were studied. the abnormalities included were trichomonal infestation of the vagina, the epithelial inflammation and cellular atypia associated with protozoal infestation, and erosions of the cervix. trichomonas vaginalis infestation and marked epithelial inflammation were associated with a very varied bacterial flora in which mycoplasma species, streptococci, and ;haemophilus vaginalis' (gardner and duk ... | 1966 | 5919354 |
| [contribution to the study of vaginitis caused by haemophilus vaginalis]. | 1966 | 5942792 |