Racial variation in vaginal pH among healthy sexually active adolescents

Sex Transm Dis. 1994 May-Jun;21(3):168-72. doi: 10.1097/00007435-199405000-00007.

Abstract

Background and objectives: To determine if there are racial differences in vaginal pH that could account for the increased prevalence of trichomoniasis among sexually active black women.

Study design: We measured the pH of vaginal secretions in a group of 273 sexually active, adolescent females without evidence of lower genital tract infection or cervical inflammation.

Results: Univariate analyses revealed that seven factors (black race, current alcohol use, nonsmoking status, gravidity, parity, and younger chronologic and gynecologic age) were significantly associated with a more alkaline vaginal pH. After a step-wise multiple regression analysis only three factors (black race, current alcohol use and parity) remained significantly related to vaginal pH, with the strongest association for black race (mean + standard deviation [SD] for vaginal pH among black adolescents 5.3 + 0.7 compared to 4.7 + 0.6 for other adolescents; P < .0001).

Conclusion: The pathophysiologic mechanisms that underlie the racial differences we identified in vaginal pH remain to be elucidated. Nevertheless, we speculate that race-related variations in the pH of normal vaginal secretions may decrease the resistance of black adolescents, one of the highest-risk obstetric population in this country, to common vaginal infections, such as trichomoniasis and bacterial vaginosis.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Black People*
  • Disease Susceptibility
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration*
  • Prospective Studies
  • Vagina / chemistry*
  • Vaginitis / immunology
  • White People