162: Stop Missing Vaginal Discharge & PID Questions on Exams
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Episode 162: Vaginal Discharge, Cervical Disease, Sexual Health, and Pelvic Infections on Exams
Vaginal discharge questions are "three-line trap" questions: a short stem with just enough detail to mix up BV, candidiasis, and trich. Add cervicitis, PID, cervical cancer screening, Bartholin masses, and inclusive sexual history… and a lot of smart PA students still miss points they don't need to miss.
In this episode, we walk through how to recognize, organize, and execute on these topics under exam pressure.
In this episode, you'll learn:
- How to match discharge description, pH, and diagnostics to the right diagnosis (BV, candidiasis, trichomoniasis)
- The difference between cervicitis and PID on exam day (friable cervix vs cervical motion tenderness)
- The PID "cascade" and how it leads to Fitz-Hugh-Curtis, ectopic pregnancy, and infertility
- Cervical cancer screening rules: when to start, when to stop, and what to do with abnormal Paps
- How to approach Bartholin cysts and abscesses, and why a postmenopausal Bartholin mass is never "just a cyst"
- How boards test sexual history, gender identity, and anatomy-based screening decisions
Priming questions before you listen:
- Strawberry cervix on pelvic exam should make you think of what diagnosis?
- At what age does routine cervical cancer screening begin?
- What is the first-line treatment for gonorrhea?
- What syndrome occurs when PID spreads to the liver capsule?
- A postmenopausal Bartholin mass should raise concern for what?
If you're working hard but your scores don't show it yet, this episode will help you see how much is pattern recognition and decision-making, not just memorizing more facts.
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