Celiac disease, or cervical columnar epithelial ectasia, may bleed after intercourse.
Ectopic cervical columnar epithelium is a common physiological phenomenon, not a disease. It is just an ectopic movement of the columnar epithelium from the inner cervical canal to the outer cervical canal, which can be seen as a kind of erosion-like state by naked eye observation. As the columnar epithelium is relatively brittle, contact bleeding may occur after intercourse.
Women with cervical columnar epithelial ectasia who bleed after intercourse need to undergo cervical liquid-based thin-layer cytology combined with human papillomavirus testing to rule out the possibility of cancer.
Patients with cervical columnar epithelial ectasia who bleed after intercourse are advised to go to a regular hospital, cooperate with the doctor to complete the relevant examinations, identify the cause and actively deal with it.