Bacterial vaginosis does not affect the accuracy of a pregnancy test.
Pregnancy does not cause bacterial vaginosis.
Bacterial vaginosis will not cause a missed period. Take a pregnancy test.
Bacterial vaginosis does not cause hepatitis. It is an imbalance in the vaginal flora.
Bacterial vaginosis does not turn into or cause chlamydia.
Bacterial vaginosis usually does not cause bleeding. But it may be a predisposing factor for cervical erosion. Cervical erosion may cause bleeding.
Pregnancy does not cause bacterial vaginosis.
Bacterial vaginosis will not cause a missed period. Take a pregnancy test.
Bacterial vaginosis does not cause chlamydia. Chlamydia is transmitted by oral, anal or vaginal sex; by genital-genital contact; or from an infected woman to her child during vaginal birth.No.Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is an imbalance in the bacteria in the genital tract. The bacteria involved are normally present and you do not catch it so it really is not an infection although it is treated with certain antibiotics to restore the balance (and sometimes caused by others that disrupt it).Chlamydia is a sexually transmitted disease that you catch from having sex with an infected partner. Its symptoms can be similar to BV so the two conditions can be confused but you do not get one from the other.
Bacterial vaginosis does not cause hepatitis. It is an imbalance in the vaginal flora.
Bacterial vaginosis does not turn into or cause chlamydia.
Trichomoniaisis can cause bacterial vaginosis, but most women with BV don't have an STD.
Bacterial vaginosis usually does not cause bleeding. But it may be a predisposing factor for cervical erosion. Cervical erosion may cause bleeding.
No. The human papilloma virus can't cause bacterial vaginosis because it is a virus, not a bacterium.human papilloma virus causes cervical cancerbacterial vaginosis is caused by gardenella [a bacteria]
Bacterial vaginosis typically causes a fishy odor, worse after washing or sex. Chlamydia does not cause odor.
A miscarriage is not likely to cause bacterial vaginosis. BV is caused when the vagina's normal helpful bacteria die off, and the "bad" bacteria take over.
Bacterial vaginosis is not an inflammatory condition, and so it does not cause cervicitis. A women with only bacterial vaginosis does not present with redness, swelling or heat in the vagina, vulva, or cervix. Trichomonas, which is almost always accompanied by BV, may cause inflammation of the female genitalia (vulvitis, cervicitis, and/or vaginitis.)
Water intake is not associated with repeated bacterial vaginosis.