## Correct Answer: D. Increased glycogen metabolism in the epithelium In normal pregnancy, the vaginal epithelium undergoes significant physiological changes driven by elevated estrogen levels. The key change is **increased glycogen deposition and metabolism in the vaginal epithelium**. Estrogen stimulates proliferation of the vaginal epithelium and increases glycogen accumulation within epithelial cells. This glycogen serves as a substrate for lactobacilli (Doderlein's bacilli), which ferment it to produce lactic acid. This increased lactic acid production lowers the vaginal pH to 3.8–4.5, creating an acidic environment that is protective against pathogenic organisms. The increased glycogen metabolism is thus a hallmark of normal pregnancy physiology and reflects the estrogen-driven epithelial changes. This mechanism is clinically important because it explains why pregnant women have a lower incidence of certain vaginal infections (like trichomoniasis) due to the acidic pH, though they remain at higher risk for candidiasis due to the high glycogen availability. The increased glycogen is demonstrable on histology and is a direct consequence of estrogen's action on the vaginal epithelium. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Decreased number of Lactobacilli** — This is wrong because pregnancy actually causes an **increase in lactobacilli** (Doderlein's bacilli), not a decrease. The elevated estrogen and increased glycogen substrate promote lactobacillary proliferation. The number of lactobacilli increases from ~10⁶ to 10⁸–10⁹ per mL of vaginal fluid. This is why the vaginal flora becomes more homogeneous and lactobacillus-dominant during pregnancy. NBE may trap students who confuse pregnancy-related changes with postmenopausal atrophy, where lactobacilli actually decrease. **B. Epithelial thinning** — This is wrong because pregnancy causes **epithelial thickening**, not thinning. Estrogen stimulates proliferation and hyperplasia of the vaginal epithelium, leading to increased thickness and vascularity. The epithelium becomes edematous and congested (Chadwick's sign). Epithelial thinning occurs in postmenopausal women due to estrogen deficiency (atrophic vaginitis). NBE may set this trap by pairing it with the correct pH change, confusing students about the direction of epithelial change. **C. pH > 6** — This is wrong because the vaginal pH in normal pregnancy is **acidic (pH 3.8–4.5)**, not alkaline. The increased lactobacilli ferment the abundant glycogen to lactic acid, maintaining the acidic environment. A pH > 6 would indicate loss of lactobacilli or bacterial vaginosis, which is actually a pathological state in pregnancy. This option reverses the correct physiological change and is a classic NBE distractor for students who know pH changes occur but misremember the direction. ## High-Yield Facts - **Increased glycogen in vaginal epithelium** is the hallmark estrogen effect in pregnancy, serving as substrate for lactobacilli. - **Vaginal pH 3.8–4.5** in pregnancy (acidic) due to increased lactic acid from lactobacillary fermentation of glycogen. - **Lactobacilli increase 100–1000 fold** in pregnancy (10⁶ to 10⁸–10⁹ per mL), making the flora more homogeneous and protective. - **Epithelial thickening and edema** (Chadwick's sign) occur in pregnancy due to estrogen-driven hyperplasia and increased vascularity. - **Candidiasis risk increases** in pregnancy despite acidic pH because of high glycogen availability, despite protective lactobacilli. ## Mnemonics **ESTROGEN VAGINAL CHANGES (EVE)** **E**pithelial thickening, **V**ascularity increased, **E**strogen-driven glycogen ↑ → lactobacilli ↑ → pH ↓ (acidic). Use this to remember all estrogen effects in pregnancy are proliferative, not atrophic. **Pregnancy Vagina = Lactobacillus Paradise** More glycogen → more lactobacilli → more lactic acid → lower pH → protection (except Candida loves glycogen too!). Memory hook: think of lactobacilli as 'glycogen-eating bacteria' that thrive in pregnancy. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "epithelial thinning" with correct pH changes to trap students who know pregnancy causes pH changes but confuse the direction of epithelial remodeling (thinning occurs in postmenopause, not pregnancy). The trap exploits mixing of two different hormonal states. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, the increased glycogen and acidic pH in pregnancy explain why trichomonas infections are rare but candidiasis is common—the acidic environment kills trichomonads but candida thrives on glycogen. This is why antifungal prophylaxis is sometimes considered in high-risk pregnant women in India, especially in the third trimester. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics, Ch. 3 (Physiological Changes in Pregnancy); Harrison Ch. 297 (Pregnancy and Lactation)_
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