With all the advertising and media campaigns, many young women who are told by their gynecologists that they have “celiac disease” are under a lot of psychological pressure. Many women in my clinic have had the experience of being told by their doctor that they have “celiac disease”, but in fact cervical “celiac disease” is not necessarily a disease, sometimes it is a sign of female maturity. The term “celiac disease” is a legacy of irregularities. The original source was a gynecologist who did a gynecological examination and found that the mouth of the cervix was all red, like the color of the lips, and there was a translucent liquid, and the surface was not smooth, and on closer inspection there were some tiny nipples, which were then called “celiac disease”. This word is scary, everyone thinks this place is rotten, inflammatory or cancerous. This is why many young women are on tenterhooks every day, seeking medical attention, which also gives many charlatans the opportunity to drill holes. Many young women therefore receive “high-tech” treatment, cervical laser therapy, cryotherapy, microwave therapy, and even LEEP surgery. In fact, this is the wrong term, it should be called cervical columnar epithelial ectoplasia. It is a sign of maturity in young women. The more estrogen a woman produces from her ovaries, the more the cervical columnar epithelium moves out, and the greater the extent of redness in the cervix. For example, when a newborn baby girl is born within a week, the cervix is all red, and after 7 days, the “erosion” becomes less and less, and almost disappears by the time she is a child. This is because when the fetus is in the womb, the level of estrogen in the mother is high and the cervical column is the most outwardly displaced, so the fetus’ cervix is all “vesiculated”. In childhood, the cervical columnar epithelium moves to the cervical canal and the cervix looks less red. This is a physiological change in women. The above are physiological cervical “erosion”, but there is also a pathological cervical “erosion”, which usually occurs when there is inflammation of the cervix or malignant changes in the cervical cells, which often require treatment.