Shigella can produce acute vaginal infections in pediatric patients wh
ich may develop into recurrent or chronic vulvovaginitis. Because symp
toms and clinical findings due to this disorder are similar to those c
aused by both foreign bodies and gonorrhoeal vaginitis, careful explor
ation is necessary to establish an adequate differential diagnosis. To
assess this issue we investigated the frequency of Shigella infection
as an etiological agent in an outpatient population with vulvovaginit
is during 1988-1991. Nine hundred and twenty-six girls with vulvovagin
itis were studied. Shigella was isolated from the vaginal discharge in
77 samples from 63 patients (6.8%). Ages ranged from 2.0 to 10.0 year
s (6.2 +/- 2.2). Fifty-one patients (81%) had bloody vaginal discharge
and 12 (19%) had purulent discharge. Ten out of 32 (31%) reported dia
rrhea preceding the vaginal symptoms. Shigella flexneri was the most p
revalent specie-68 cases (88.3%), followed by Shigella boydii-4 cases
(5.2%), Shigella spp-3 cases (4%), and Shigella dysenteriae-2 cases (2
.6%). These findings correlated with those of species usually found in
stools from patients with diarrhea in our hospital. Stool cultures we
re carried out in 19 patients, and only one was positive for Shigella.
Enterobius vermicularis was found in 26 (64%) of 40 patients with vul
vovaginitis resulting from Shigella. Antibiotic therapy was initiated
according to in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility which showed a high
resistance to ampicillin (79%) and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (76%
). As a result of these findings, the high incidence of Shigella vulvo
vaginitis found in our population underscores the importance of perfor
ming specific cultures for this genus in patients with vulvovaginitis
and the need to explore for Enterobius vermicularis infestation.