How is cervical polyp treated
summary
I feel that my leucorrhea is much more than before, and I found that there is blood in the leucorrhea, and there is blood flowing out below after sex life. Because I was afraid of something serious, I went to the hospital to have a look, diagnose cervical polyps, and treat them for a period of time. Now it's better. I share my friend's experience of how to treat cervical polyps with you, hoping to give you a reminder Use.
How is cervical polyp treated
Treatment 1: cryotherapy, with liquid nitrogen rapid cooling device, the probe was placed on the erosive surface for 1-3 minutes, and then it was taken out after natural rewarming, so that the lesion tissue was frozen and necrotic. After 2-3 weeks of treatment, a lot of watery secretions could flow out. The advantage is less bleeding and cervical stenosis.
Treatment 2: Western medicine for the treatment of endometrial polyps to surgical resection. But if accompanied by inflammation, first to control infection; bleeding, mainly to stop bleeding. After the control of inflammation, the polyps were operated again. Although the polyps were rarely cancerous, the canceration rate was also increasing.
Treatment 3: General endometrial polyps patients in regular hospital treatment, and postoperative care properly, and follow-up review is not easy to relapse. When endometrial polyps appear, the more reliable way is to remove the polyp tissue without hesitation, in order to prevent recurrence due to incomplete treatment. Therefore, medicine can only be used as a supplement. Don't think it has the effect of cutting down the roots.
matters needing attention
Cervical polyp is one of the most common diseases in women with cervical diseases, which mostly occurs in middle-aged and elderly women. Clinical data show that incidence rate is about 5% of the women of childbearing age, accounting for 4%~10% of all cervical lesions. The peak of the disease is 30~50 years old. 98% of the cases occur in married women, including 62.3% of the parturients, 35% of whom are married but no childbearing women, and 2% of the unmarried women.