Among 106 women harbouring yeasts in the vagina and with other causes of genital pathology excluded, there was a statistically significant association between numbers of yeasts recovered semi-quantitatively from vaginal swabs and symptoms of pruritus and signs of abnormal vaginal discharge but no association between yeast numbers and other individual symptoms or signs of vaginal candidosis, including patients' own subjective assessment of abnormal vaginal discharge. The presence of yeasts detectable by direct microscopic examination was statistically associated with pruritus, discharge and vaginitis. There was no relationship between numbers of vaginal yeasts and histories of antibiotic or oral contraceptive usage or the stage of the menstrual cycle. Distributions of Candida species and Candida albicans biotypes were not statistically related to any symptoms, signs or other factors. The results of this study suggest that vaginal pathology caused by Candida species may be related to the quantity of the fungus in the vagina and that only pruritus and objectively assessed vaginal discharge are firm clinical indicators of Candida infection.
Summary Yeasts were isolated from two or more anatomical sites in 198 women attending genitourinary clinics on at least two occasions. The yeast biotypes isolated concurrently from the vagina and urethra were the same in 138 (99%) of 140 instances, and 94% of 124 concurrent genital and anal isolates were of matching types, whereas only 75% of concurrent genital and oral isolates were of the same type. Mixtures of Candida spp. or C. albicans biotypes were encountered only five times among 545 yeast-positive samples. In instances where Candida spp. were isolated at successive times from the same site in a patient, the same yeast type was encountered on 97 (87%) of 112 occasions when the interval between samples was less than 15 weeks, and on 19 (66%) of 29 occasions when the interval was 15 weeks or more. These data indicate a tendency to carriage of phenotypically consistent types of Candida among most women attending genitourinary clinics.