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Article!
...Please this is for the Ladies only...I beg!
Bacteria that live normally in the vagina differ from
woman to woman and can even change dramatically in short periods of
time in the same woman, a new analysis reveals.
The findings are likely to alter the
one-size-fits-all diagnosis and treatment of vaginal infections that
currently prevails among obstetricians and gynaecologists.
“This certainly changes the diagnosis, treatment and
prevention of vaginosis (bacterial infection in the vagina),” said
Stephen Dewhurst, chairman of microbiology and immunology at the
University of Rochester Medical Center in New York.
“Among other things, this makes vaginosis much harder
to diagnose. If vaginal bacteria change over time, how sure are you
that this really is vaginosis?”
Dewhurst was not involved with the study, which appears in the May 2 issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.
“In the practice of medicine, all women have been
considered pretty much the same when it comes to vaginal microbiota,
with the same treatment,” said study senior author Jacques Ravel, an
associate professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of
Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore. Antibiotics typically are
prescribed to treat vaginosis.
“In some people, treatments work really well, and in
some they fail,” said Ravel, who also is associate director of the
university’s Institute for Genome Sciences. “Now we know it’s because
not all women are made equal.”
Prior research by the same group had identified five
basic microbial communities in the vagina. The researchers also found
that these communities tended to vary according to ethnicity.
The balance of microbial communities is vital in protecting women from infections, including sexually transmitted diseases.
But bacterial vaginosis — when one type of bacteria
thrives and dominates other types, which raises the risk of infection —
is extremely common.
Ravel and his co-authors collected vaginal bacterial
samples from 32 healthy, reproductive-age women twice a week for four
months, and then analysed the samples using genomic techniques.
Again, the researchers found five basic bacterial
communities, and also noted that some changed rapidly in the same woman
while others stayed stable.
In some cases, the collection of bacteria seen in a
particular woman would have indicated the presence of bacterial
vaginosis, although these women were healthy and not experiencing any
symptoms.
“This changes what we consider to be a normal bacterial community in the vagina,” Dewhurst said.
Changes in bacterial communities tended to correspond
with estrogen levels at different points in the menstrual cycle, the
particular composition of bacteria in a woman’s vagina and sexual
activity.
It’s also likely that what a woman eats or the environment in which she lives will affect microbial composition, Ravel added.
The authors postulated that microbiota that fluctuated regularly may make a woman more vulnerable to infection.
“Bacterial vaginosis is linked to transmission of HIV
and other sexually transmitted diseases, so this is a potentially
significant risk factor for acquiring sexually transmitted diseases,”
Dewhurst said.
And if it turns out that there is a “new normal” of
vaginal microbiota — depending on the woman — this could curb the
overuse of antibiotics, the authors said.
Vaginal bacteria also can affect pregnancy and
fertility. The composition of vaginal microbiota and of a man’s sperm
could mean that a woman is fertile with one man and infertile with
another, an accompanying editorial suggested.

''Forget the photo, read the story''...LWKMD!
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