Can celiac disease develop into cervical cancer?

  ”Celiac disease is a problem that has long plagued many women. This is especially true when some medical institutions and commercial advertisements are driven by economic interests and make a big deal of the dangers of celiac disease, causing women to worry and panic about it.  Celiac disease is a normal physiological change of the cervix, not a pathological state. Usually when the hormone level in the body is elevated, the cervical columnar epithelium moves outward and covers the surface of the cervix, and the appearance of the cervix looks congested and red, which looks like erosion, called cervical erosion. Therefore, many women who are unmarried or even not sexually active also have cervical erosion. In addition, some people believe that cervical erosion occurs in connection with unclean sex and are repulsed by having sex, which is wrong.  Celiac disease is not caused by bacterial infection and the application of local vaginal douching is not recommended if it is not accompanied by vaginal inflammation. Excessive douching may destroy the protective barrier of the vagina itself, which not only does not help celiac disease, but can cause secondary vaginal infections.  For many asymptomatic cervical erosions, no special treatment is needed and cervical erosions themselves do not develop into cervical cancer. When symptoms of celiac disease appear, such as increased discharge and contact bleeding, physical therapy, such as laser, electrocautery, freezing, microwave, etc., are needed with similar effects. Physical therapy is to treat cervical erosion by destroying a layer of cells on the surface of the cervix, and by repairing the damage so that the columnar epithelial cells are transformed into squamous epithelial cells, thus physical therapy will not lead to narrowing of the cervical opening, much less infertility. However, LEEP surgery is not required. LEEP surgery is overtreatment and carries an increased risk of miscarriage or preterm delivery in future pregnancies!  There is little relationship between cervical erosion and cervical cancer, but since patients with moderate or severe cervical erosion usually have symptoms such as increased discharge leucorrhea, odor, bleeding after intercourse and vulvar itching. And these symptoms are extremely similar to the early symptoms of cervical cancer, especially contact bleeding from the cervix. Celiac disease and cervical precancer or cervical cancer are sometimes difficult to distinguish on visual examination. Therefore, before treating cervical erosion, it is important to emphasize that cervical cytology and virology (human papillomavirus) tests should be performed first to exclude cervical cancer (including precancerous lesions) before considering treatment for symptomatic cervical erosion.