Can celiac disease affect pregnancy?

  Mild to moderate cervical erosion does not usually affect pregnancy because cervical erosion is a normal physiological outgrowth of columnar epithelium and does not usually affect pregnancy if it is not accompanied by gynecological inflammation. However, severe cervical erosion has a higher probability of affecting pregnancy.  Most of the cervical erosions are pseudo-erosions, which are caused by high estrogen levels, causing the cervical columnar epithelium to migrate out and look like an erosion surface, which is actually physiological. If it is mild to moderate celiac disease, it is usually not combined with inflammatory infections and has no effect on a woman’s pregnancy. In case of severe erosion, it is easy to combine inflammatory infections at this time and cervical hypertrophy occurs, which changes the local environment for conception and thus affects pregnancy.  If the usual leucorrhea is normal, cervical erosion generally does not require treatment, and attention to sexual hygiene is sufficient. If the usual amount of leucorrhea and yellowing, you can go to a regular hospital and treat it with topical medication and get pregnant after it is cured to avoid co-infection when cervical erosion, which can affect normal conception.