Vaginal Discharge Syndrome in Women
The symptoms of cervicitis and vaginitis overlap. Abnormal (in
amount, color or odor) vaginal discharge is the symptom most commonly presented,
but it is more predictive for vaginitis than for cervicitis.18,19 The
sensitivity of the symptom vaginal discharge for cervicitis varies from 25
percent (prostitutes in Zaire) to 48 percent (STD patients in USA). Cervical
mucopus and induced endocervical bleeding have a high specificity (83 to 99
percent) but a low sensitivity (1 to 43 percent) as clinical signs for
cervicitis. Examples of flowcharts for vaginal discharge are shown in Figures 4
and 5.
Figure 4 is a flowchart for situations in which a speculum
examination is not possible. The most probable cause of a woman complaining of
vaginal discharge is vaginitis. Cervicitis is a less frequent cause of
consultation for vaginal discharge, but the complications of untreated
cervicitis are much more serious.

Figure 4 - Example of a Flowchart for
the Management of Vaginal Discharge - HAITI (without speculum)
The accuracy and cost-effectiveness of syndromic diagnosis of
vaginitis can be improved significantly in some settings by adding a risk
assessment component to the case management protocols (for instance, determining
whether an individual has had a new sexual partner or more than one sexual
partner in the past three months). Using this approach, a woman with vaginal
discharge and positive risk assessment for STDs would be treated for gonorrhea
and chlamydia cervicitis as well as for vaginitis; a woman with no risk factors
for STDs would be treated only for vaginitis, which requires a much less
expensive treatment regimen. A recent analysis of data from pregnant women and
sex workers in Zaire suggested that a simple case management protocol based on
reported vaginal discharge and a risk assessment could be a useful tool for
symptomatic women at high and low risk for STDs.20
In situations where a speculum examination is possible, the
clinician can try to differentiate between various etiologies of vaginal
discharge. The clinical sign mucopus, however, is not sensitive enough to be the
only indication for cervicitis treatment. Figure 5 is an example of a flowchart
utilizing a speculum exam and a risk assessment.

Figure 5 - Example of a Flowchart for
the Management of Vaginal Discharge - JAMAICA (without speculum)
An alternative for differentiating etiologies for vaginitis can
be offered by simple laboratory tests, if the infrastructure is available.
Direct examination of a vaginal wet mount is useful for detecting trichomonads
and yeast forms. Determination of the vaginal pH and amine odor with 10 percent
potassium hydroxide solution can be helpful in the diagnosis of bacterial
vaginosis. However, no simple laboratory test has been developed so far for
detecting cervicitis. Adding Gram stain for the detection of intracellular
gram-negative diplococci or leukocytes in the endocervix does not offer any
advantage, as the sensitivity will drop dramatically. The leukocyte esterase
dipstick, which has a good sensitivity for detecting male urethritis, had a
sensitivity of only 47 percent for the detection of
cervicitis.15