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New bacteria linked to vaginal infections.


Several species of normally harmless bacteria flourish in the vagina. But sometimes this internal ecosystem tunas nasty, causing what's called bacterial vaginosis bacterial vaginosis vag·i·no·sis (vj-n
n.
Overgrowth of anaerobic vaginal flora (especially species of Bacteroides and Gardnerella) and loss of normal lactobacilli, often causing irritation and a discharge with a "fishy" odor, and increasing the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease and adverse pregnancy outcomes.
, which can produce a fishy odor and milky, discharge. Researchers haven't been able to pin the blame on any single bacterium.

That's because several newly described bacteria appear to share much of the responsibility, says David Fredricks of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

He and Jeanne Marrazzo of Seattle's Harborview Medical Center took bacterial samples from the vaginas of 36 healthy women and 35 women with bacterial vaginosis. The researchers used several technologies to distinguish the bacteria genetically

In healthy women, most or all vaginal bacteria belonged to two or three species of the genus Lactobacillus
Lactobacillus acido´philus  a lactobacillus producing the fermented product, acidophilus milk; preparations are used as digestive aids, for the production of B-complex vitamins, and to help prevent infections after antibiotic treatment.

lactobacillus /lac·to·bac·il·lus/ (-bah-sil´us) pl. lactobacil´li   an organism of the genus Lactobacillus.
, Fredricks and Marrazzo found. Most abundant was Lactobacillus crispatus.

Women with vaginosis, however, didn't appear to have L. crispatus. Fredericks says, "There's an incredible bacterial diversity in [these] women."

On average, the researchers detected more than a dozen bacterial types, some of them previously unknown, in the women with vaginosis. Most of these bacteria also showed up occasionally in the healthy women, but three novel species occurred only in the women with vaginosis, the researchers report.--B.H.
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Title Annotation:Bacterial Ecology
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 16, 2004
Words:198
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