Advice

Is bacterial vaginosis to blame for this excess discharge?

Anonymous
Question

Hi, I was recently treated for some sort of bacterial infection in the vagina with metronidazole pills that I took twice a day for a week. Toward the last couple of days of treatment, my discharge came out in long, oozing strings pretty much every time I sat down to go to the bathroom. It was pretty gross! I figured it had something to do with everything being cleared out, but it still lasted for a day or two after I stopped treatment. Now, I've been off of the antibiotics for nearly a week, and I'm still noticing a little bit more discharge than I would probably want. Is there kind of an adjustment period here? Did the medication not fully treat the problem...or did it cause ANOTHER one?

Hi there, metronidazole (Flagyl) is the most common treatment for bacterial vaginosis⁠ (BV). While many people who contract BV don’t show symptoms, when they do, the discharge⁠ that usually occurs is milky-greyish and fishy-smelling. that doesn’t really fit with the description you gave. However it is common for people with vaginas to have whiting-clear, oozing, stringy mucus discharged around the time of ovulation⁠; it usually lasts a few days. Those strings are actually long proteins that make channels, enabling sperm⁠ to swim up into the uterus⁠ and Fallopian tubes. If you are not currently on hormonal contraception⁠ (pills, Ortho-Evra patches, NuvaRing), then you should be producing the stringy mucus as part of your regular cycle.

As for the metronidazole, if you finished the course of antibiotics as directed, then it should have taken care of the infection⁠ with any lingering effects not lasting more than two or three days. However if you notice any milky-greyish discharge that smells wrong, then definitely call the doctor for a follow up. Some people with vaginas do have problems with recurring or persistent infections which is bad because prolonged infection can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease.

For more about BV, check out⁠: The STI Files: Bacterial Vaginosis

    Similar articles and advice

    Article
    • Samantha Benac

    I’m just going to lay it down for you: sex will not be great unless you’re mentally and emotionally prepared. But “prepared” means something different for everyone. For one person, it might mean a solid, committed relationship. For another, it might mean having overcome some body image problems. And for yet another, you might just genuinely feel ready right out of the gate. We all require different things in order to be truly prepared to have sex for the first time. Some of us might require a lot, and some might require almost nothing. Sex might have a lot of emotional or moral meaning for one person, but for another, it might have no such weight behind it at all.