We often encounter patients who have been seen in lower hospitals asking for treatment of so-called “cervical erosion” in our outpatient clinics, and we are now summarizing the questions of these patients in the hope that we can have a new understanding of “cervical erosion” Q: Is “cervical erosion “Is it a disease? A: No. It is an outdated name for what is now called Columnar Epithelial Ectoplasia. Q: Does “celiac disease” need treatment? A: It is not a disease and certainly does not require treatment. Q: Is “celiac disease” cervicitis? A: “Cervical erosion” is one of the states of the cervix. Whether it is inflammatory depends on whether there is purulent leucorrhea, abdominal pain, fever, and whether pathogenic bacteria, especially gonococcus and chlamydia, can be detected. The absence of these symptoms in either state is not cervicitis; cervicitis is diagnosed only when it is present. Q: Can “celiac disease” become cancerous? A: Cancer can develop in any tissue, but “celiac disease” is not the cause of cancer. HPV infection, and persistent infection, is the cause of cancer in the cervix, and HPV infection can occur in either state of the cervix. Q: Does “celiac disease” Does it affect fertility? A: No, it does not. It is not this state that affects fertility. It is other causes and factors such as inflammation and adhesions. Q: Can I get an HPV test to determine the “extent” of celiac disease? A: The degree is a comparison that describes the severity of the disease, not the disease, and is not graded. In the past, celiac disease was classified as a degree, but now those terms have been abolished. If there is a real abnormality in the cervix then there is a specific disease diagnosis name: cervical intraepithelial lesion, which is divided into high-grade and low-grade cervical intraepithelial lesions. High-grade is precancerous. But it has nothing to do with the presence or absence of “cervical erosion”. Smooth ones can be cancerous as well. These diagnoses cannot be made by just looking, but by laboratory tests such as TCT and HPV.