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. 2009 Jun 2;9:116. doi: 10.1186/1471-2180-9-116

Table 1.

Overview of microflora patterns for patients who displayed a conversion from normal to abnormal microflora (n = 13)

Microflora grade on Gram stain
patient number trimester I trimester II trimester III

PB2003/003 Ib I-like I-like

PB2003/007 Ib III Ia

PB2003/013 Ib II Ib

PB2003/018 Ia Ia I-like

PB2003/019 Ib II II

PB2003/049 Ib Ib II

PB2003/084 Ib II Ia

PB2003/101 Iab Ib II

PB2003/116 Ib I-like II

PB2003/130 Ib I-like Ib

PB2003/147 Ib Ib I-like

PB2003/148 Ib Ib II

PB2003/155 Ib Ib II

Gram stained vaginal smears were scored according to the criteria previously described by Verhelst et al [7]. Briefly, Gram-stained vaginal smears were categorized as grade I (normal) when only Lactobacillus cell types were present, as grade II (intermediate) when both Lactobacillus and bacterial vaginosis-associated cell types were present, as grade III (bacterial vaginosis) when bacterial vaginosis-associated cell types were abundant in the absence of lactobacilli, as grade IV when only gram-positive cocci were observed, and as grade I-like when irregularly shaped or curved gram-positive rods were predominant [7]. For the purpose of this study, grade I or Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microflora is designated as 'normal vaginal microflora' and all other grades as 'abnormal vaginal microflora'.