Vaginal symptoms share a frustrating characteristic: they often look and feel similar regardless of their cause. Itching, burning, abnormal discharge, and odor can each be produced by bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, trichomoniasis, genitourinary syndrome of menopause, contact dermatitis, vulvodynia, or other conditions — and the treatment for each is entirely different. Treating the wrong condition produces no improvement and delays effective care.
This is why the most important step in managing any persistent or recurring vaginal symptom is an accurate clinical diagnosis — with testing that identifies the specific organism or condition responsible. Self-treatment with over-the-counter antifungal products is appropriate when a woman has a clear history of confirmed yeast infections and recognizes the same pattern. For symptoms that are new, recurrent despite treatment, or uncertain in character, clinical evaluation with pH testing, microscopy, and culture provides the definitive diagnosis that guides effective treatment.
At Lapeer Women’s Health, vaginal symptom evaluation begins with clinical testing that identifies what is actually causing the symptom — and ends with treatment that addresses the specific cause.
Each of the following conditions produces vaginal symptoms that are covered in depth on its dedicated page. The hub page provides context for how they differ from each other — distinctions that are clinically essential but not always apparent to patients managing symptoms at home.
Vaginal Itching
Vaginal itching has multiple possible causes including yeast infections, bacterial vaginosis, contact dermatitis from personal care products, genitourinary syndrome of menopause, skin conditions such as lichen sclerosus, and in some cases sexually transmitted infections. The correct treatment depends on identifying the specific cause through clinical examination and testing. Learn more →
Vaginal Discharge
Normal vaginal discharge varies throughout the menstrual cycle. Abnormal discharge — changed in color, consistency, quantity, or odor — is a common presenting symptom of vaginal infections and other conditions. The character of the discharge provides diagnostic clues, but clinical testing is required for definitive identification. Learn more →
Vaginal Odor
An unusual or unpleasant vaginal odor — particularly a fishy odor — is the most characteristic symptom of bacterial vaginosis, the most common vaginal infection in reproductive-age women. Other sources include trichomoniasis, retained foreign bodies, and poor hygiene practices that disrupt the normal vaginal ecosystem. Learn more →
Yeast Infection vs Bacterial Vaginosis
Yeast infections and BV are the two most common vaginal infections, and their symptoms overlap substantially. Self-treating BV with yeast medication — a very common pattern — produces no improvement and delays the specific antibiotic treatment that BV requires. A single office visit with clinical testing definitively distinguishes them and provides the right treatment. Learn more →
Vaginal Dryness
Vaginal dryness occurs across a broader range of ages and situations than is commonly recognized — not only in menopause. Hormonal contraception, breastfeeding, cancer treatment, and primary hormonal deficiency all produce vaginal dryness with similar tissue effects. Treatment is highly effective and is available for women at any age. Learn more →
Vulvodynia
Vulvodynia is chronic vulvar pain without an identifiable infectious or dermatologic cause. It is common, significantly underdiagnosed, and consistently undertreated — in part because its symptoms overlap with infections that are treated without eliminating the pain, and in part because chronic pain conditions require a different management approach than infectious conditions. Learn more →
Vaginal Burning and Irritation
Vaginal burning and irritation are symptom presentations that overlap with multiple conditions and require accurate characterization to treat effectively. Contact dermatitis from personal care products, infections, atrophy, and vulvodynia each produce burning and irritation with distinct clinical features that examination and testing can distinguish. Learn more →
Most vaginal symptoms are addressed through a scheduled appointment. Contact our office the same day if you experience:
- Vaginal bleeding that is unexplained or postmenopausal
- Significant vaginal pain or swelling suggesting infection of the Bartholin gland or other acute process
- New vaginal symptoms alongside fever suggesting systemic infection
- New vaginal ulcer, sore, or lesion that warrants prompt evaluation
Vaginal symptom evaluation at Lapeer Women’s Health is led by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with an approach grounded in accurate diagnosis before any treatment recommendation is made.
Clinical Testing at the Visit
Vaginal pH measurement, wet preparation microscopy, and where indicated, vaginal culture and STI testing are performed at the evaluation visit. These tests provide immediate or rapid results that identify the specific cause of vaginal symptoms — distinguishing yeast from BV, identifying trichomonas, assessing for atrophy, and identifying skin conditions that require different management.
Symptom and Exposure History
The specific character of the symptoms, their duration, prior treatment attempts and their effect, recent antibiotic exposure, hormonal status, personal care product use, and sexual history are all relevant to identifying the cause and guiding management. This history is reviewed alongside clinical test results for the most accurate diagnostic picture.
Targeted Treatment
Treatment is specific to the identified diagnosis. BV is treated with antibiotics specific to the causative organisms. Yeast is treated with antifungals. Atrophy is treated with local estrogen. Vulvodynia requires a pain management approach entirely different from infectious treatment. No recommendation is made without first establishing what is causing the symptoms.
Vaginal symptoms that keep coming back after self-treatment, or that have not fully resolved despite multiple antibiotic or antifungal courses, are telling you that the correct diagnosis has not yet been made and targeted. This is one of the most common patterns in vaginal symptom management — treatment without diagnosis, repeated until the patient accepts chronic discomfort as her baseline.
A single office visit with clinical testing typically identifies the cause and provides the treatment that ends the cycle. Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here to provide that evaluation — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, without a referral required.
Vaginal Symptoms
Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health provides clinical testing and targeted treatment for vaginal symptoms at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. No referral required.
Schedule a Gynecologic VisitThe information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.
Gynecologic care for women of every age
Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307
Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.
