Lactobacillus Jensenii: A Protective Vaginal Bacteria | Epicentre
Vaginal microbiome

Lactobacillus Jensenii: A Quiet Protector of Vaginal Health

Lactobacillus jensenii is one of the four Lactobacillus species most associated with a healthy vagina. It produces hydrogen peroxide and helps keep the environment acidic and defended, working alongside L. crispatus to hold pathogens at bay.

No doctor's referral 17-target PCR panel Walk in or test at home
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core Lactobacillus species linked to a healthy vaginal microbiome, alongside crispatus, gasseri and iners.
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Medically reviewed by Dr Samantha Naidoo MB ChB, FCP (SA) · Medical Director, Epicentre Walk-In Labs · Reviewed 9 June 2026
The short answer

What does Lactobacillus jensenii do?

Lactobacillus jensenii is one of the main Lactobacillus species found in a healthy vaginal microbiome, alongside L. crispatus, L. gasseri and L. iners.

It produces hydrogen peroxide, a natural antimicrobial, and contributes lactic acid that helps keep the vaginal pH low. Both actions make the environment harder for pathogens to colonise. A microbiome with healthy jensenii is generally counted among the protective, health-associated states.

Hydrogen-peroxide-producing Lactobacillus, a group that includes L. jensenii and L. crispatus, are linked to a lower frequency of bacterial vaginosis, thrush and several sexually transmitted infections. L. jensenii tends to work as part of a protective community rather than alone, adding to the overall defence rather than dominating it.

Why it matters

Where L. jensenii fits in your defences

Think of the protective Lactobacillus as a team. L. crispatus is the lead, but jensenii is a dependable member of the same protective group, contributing the same two core defences.

Produces hydrogen peroxide

This natural antimicrobial helps suppress the bacteria and yeast that cause vaginal infections.

Keeps the pH low

Its lactic acid adds to the acidity that makes the vagina inhospitable to pathogens.

Part of a healthy community

Jensenii alongside crispatus is one of the microbiome states most associated with stability and health.

What the result means

What your L. jensenii level tells you

Healthy levels of L. jensenii are a reassuring sign: they indicate that part of your protective defence is in place. Low levels are not a diagnosis, but they suggest your defences are thinner than ideal, which matters most when read together with your other Lactobacillus and any BV-associated bacteria.

One species is a clue; the balance is the answer. A PCR microbiome panel measures L. jensenii alongside L. crispatus, L. iners and the organisms linked to BV, so you can see whether your protective species are holding the line or losing ground. That is what guides sensible next steps.

This is particularly useful if you have recurrent infections, are planning a pregnancy, or simply want a clear baseline of your vaginal health rather than guessing from symptoms.

The BV Microbiome Test

R1,609 17-target PCR panel

Epicentre's BV Microbiome Test is a 17-target PCR panel that measures protective Lactobacillus, including L. jensenii, alongside the BV-associated bacteria that move in when they decline. No doctor's referral, and you collect the sample yourself in private.

  • Protective Lactobacillus levels, including Lactobacillus jensenii, so you can see whether your defences are intact.
  • BV-associated bacteria, such as Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, the organisms that take over when Lactobacillus falls.
  • Group B Streptococcus, which matters in pregnancy.
  • You collect the swab yourself, in private, at a branch or at home, with guidance if you want it.
In a South African context

Testing your vaginal microbiome in South Africa

Bacterial vaginosis, the condition tied to low protective Lactobacillus, affects roughly a quarter of reproductive-age women worldwide, and in South Africa it is also linked to higher HIV risk. Knowing whether your protective species, including L. jensenii, are present gives you a real basis for action rather than trial and error.

Recurrent infections

Check your defences

If infections keep returning, a panel shows whether your protective Lactobacillus, jensenii included, have recovered.

Planning pregnancy

Know your baseline

A protective, Lactobacillus-rich microbiome is linked to better pregnancy outcomes. Testing gives you a starting point.

Private and local

No referral, three cities

Walk in at Observatory in Cape Town, Hillcrest in Durban or Parktown North in Johannesburg, or test at home anywhere in South Africa.

Jensenii does not get the attention crispatus does, but it is part of the same protective group. When I see it on a result, it tells me the protective side of the microbiome still has some strength to build on.

Dr Samantha NaidooMedical Director, Epicentre Walk-In Labs

What testing can and cannot tell you

A microbiome test maps which organisms are present and in what balance; it is not a diagnosis on its own.

  • The result describes your vaginal flora at one point in time, which can shift with your cycle, sex, antibiotics and hormones.
  • It does not replace a clinical assessment. Use it to inform a conversation with a healthcare practitioner.
  • If you have severe pain, fever, or symptoms in pregnancy, seek medical care rather than waiting for a result.
  • PCR results take 5 to 7 working days.
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Common questions

Lactobacillus jensenii: quick answers

L. jensenii is a protective vaginal bacterium. It produces hydrogen peroxide, a natural antimicrobial, and contributes lactic acid that keeps the vaginal pH low. Both help keep out the organisms that cause bacterial vaginosis, thrush and some sexually transmitted infections.
Yes. It is one of the four Lactobacillus species most associated with a healthy vaginal microbiome, and as a hydrogen-peroxide producer it is part of the protective group, alongside L. crispatus.
Low L. jensenii is not a diagnosis on its own, but it suggests your protective defences are thinner than ideal. It is most meaningful read alongside your other Lactobacillus and any BV-associated bacteria, which is why a full panel is more useful than a single marker.
Both are protective, hydrogen-peroxide-producing species. L. crispatus is the most protective and the strongest acid producer, while L. jensenii is a dependable member of the same protective group. Seeing either, especially together, is a good sign.
With a PCR vaginal microbiome panel. Epicentre's BV Microbiome Test measures L. jensenii alongside L. crispatus, L. iners, BV-associated bacteria and Group B Streptococcus, from a single self-collected swab, for R1,609. Results take 5 to 7 working days.
At any Epicentre walk-in lab: 24 Lower Main Road, Observatory in Cape Town; 2 Knelsby Avenue, Hillcrest in Durban; or 2 7th Avenue, Parktown North in Johannesburg. You can also order a discreet home kit. No doctor's referral is needed.
Where to test

Vaginal microbiome testing in Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg

The BV Microbiome Test is available at all three Epicentre walk-in labs: Observatory in Cape Town, Hillcrest in Durban and Parktown North in Johannesburg. Walk in, or book online first. You collect the swab yourself, in private.

Cape Town

24 Lower Main Road, Observatory

021 201 1658

Mon to Fri, 08:30 to 16:00

Get directions

Durban

2 Knelsby Avenue, Hillcrest

031 880 2150

Mon to Fri, 08:30 to 16:00

Get directions

Johannesburg

2 7th Avenue, Parktown North

010 825 6318

Mon to Fri, 08:30 to 16:00

Get directions
Related guides

Other organisms in the panel

Medically reviewed by Dr Samantha Naidoo, MB ChB, FCP (SA), Medical Director at Epicentre Walk-In Labs. Reviewed 9 June 2026. This article is general health information, not a medical diagnosis. Epicentre Aids Risk Management (Pty) Ltd provides diagnostic laboratory testing and does not provide diagnoses, treatment or prescriptions to the public; results are intended to inform discussions with a registered healthcare practitioner.

See whether your protective bacteria are holding the line

The BV Microbiome Test measures L. jensenii and the rest of your vaginal flora from one self-collected swab. Walk in at Observatory, Hillcrest or Parktown North, or order a discreet home kit.