MMS (well diluted-follow instructions per protocol) should clear it up!
Viewed under the microscope Trichomonas vaginalis moves quickly; it has four undulating flagella and a tail. “It is a gassy organism,” says Dr. Carlton. It has special power-generating structures called hydrogenosomes. They produce hydrogen. “So it is releasing hydrogen into the liquid media, making it frothy,” she says. “That is why the vaginal discharge is frothy.”
The pathogen grows easily in the lab in test tubes containing some liquid media. And it has, as she says, “a real yuck factor to it.” A good way to know the microbe is growing well is to smell the contents of the test tube. “It smells foul, it has a fishy odor; really nasty,” says Dr. Carlton. “My technician used to get grossed out by that.”