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Epidemiologic study of trichomoniasis in normal women.

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1966

Year

Abstract

The prevalence of trichomonas vaginalis in a relatively unselected group of 4341 30-45 year old white women from Washington County, Maryland, was examined in Papanicolaou stained smears prepared by the self-administered irrigation smear method. 14.5% of the 4290 satisfactory smears were classified as positive for T. vaginalis. This may have been underestimated since over 1/2 of the group showed few parasites. 2.7% of the total (20% of the positive group) had heavy infestations. There was an insignificant increase between 30-34 and 40-45 year old women (13.6%-15.2%). There was a negative association between the amount of schooling and incidence of infection. Married women had 1/2 the infection incidence of widowed or never married women and one-third the incidence of divorced or separated women, a a pattern which differs from other reports. However, symptomatic unmarried women may have responded to the survey in greater numbers than symptomatic unmarried women, biasing the results. There was a significantly higher incidence of trichomoniasis among women married several times than among women married only once. There was a correlation between age at first marriage and infection incidence. The use of intravaginal contraceptive agents may have an effect on the trichomonads. There was no correlation with religion or size of household. Inverse correlations were noted between income, occupation of husband, crowding and sanitary facilities and trichomoniasis infection with an exception being the low frequency among farm women. Moderate and heavy cigarette smokers had higher infection rates than light and nonsmokers, and there was a high association of trichomoniasis with abnormal cytologic findings. These were all consistent with a venereal mode of transmission.