Vaginal wet mount
A vaginal wet mount (or vaginal smear
Applications
Vaginal wet mounts are used in case of vaginitis symptoms such as vaginal itching, burning, rash, odor, or discharge. It may assist in suspicion of vaginal yeast infection, trichomoniasis and bacterial vaginosis.[citation needed]
Infections such as
It may also be used in a rape investigation to detect presence of semen.[citation needed]
Method
Vaginal wet mounts are not done during the menstrual period, because menstrual blood on the slide can confound the results.
The sampling is done with the patient in
Interpretation
Normally, no yeast or trichomonas are found on the slide. White blood cells and clue cells are normally absent or very low in number.[1]
Symptoms of infections able to be diagnosed by wet mount:
- A vaginal yeast infection often causes a white, lumpy discharge that looks like cottage cheese.[1]
- diagnosis is made if pseudohyphae or yeast buds are present (these are visible only 50% of the time)
- Trichomoniasis causes a vaginal discharge that is yellow-green, foamy, and bad-smelling.[1]
- Diagnosis is made if mobile trichomonads are visible on the slide
- Bacterial vaginosis generally produces a vaginal discharge that is thin and milky with a fishy odor.[1]
- Diagnosis is made using Amsel Criteria - three of the four following criteria must be met:
- >20% of the epithelial cells are clue cells (the single most reliable predictor)[4]
- Discharge is thin and homogeneous
- Sample smells fishy when mixed with potassium hydroxide ("whiff test")
- Vaginal pH is >4.5
Furthermore, presence of
Concomitant vaginal discharge tests
A vaginal discharge sample wet mount is often also used for the following additional tests:
- KOH slide. A sample of the vaginal discharge is placed on a slide and mixed with a solution of potassium hydroxide (KOH). The KOH kills bacteria and cells from the vagina, leaving only yeast for easier detection of a yeast infection. Several drops of a potassium hydroxide (KOH) solution may also be added to a sample of the vaginal discharge to test for any resultant strong fishy odor from the mix, which would indicate bacterial vaginosis. The latter procedure is called a Whiff test.[1]
- Vaginal pH test. The normal vaginal pH is 3.8 to 4.5. Bacterial vaginosis, trichomoniasis, and atrophic vaginitis often cause a vaginal pH higher than 4.5.[1]
If indicated, the sample can also be used for:
- Detecting atrophic vaginitis by additional staining.[1]
- Vaginal culture, to see if bacteria or yeast will grow.[1]
See also
- Pap smear