What is celiac disease all about?

       Celiac disease is a common gynecological disease that seriously affects the quality of women’s conjugal life and can also lead to female infertility. Long-term untreated delay after delay not only aggravates the treatment difficulty of celiac disease, but is also likely to lead to cervical cancer. Therefore, early detection of cervical erosion is especially important.  The actual fact is that you can find a variety of advanced treatment devices, various “knives”, freezing, gene therapy and so on, high-end, atmospheric, upscale, focus on the money pit thing.  In fact, a number of gynecologists have repeatedly debunked the rumors, but also the major “search engines” to help the evil behavior is deeply disgraceful!  The original Concord Hospital gynecologist, Dr. Gong Xiaoming, sent a detailed text in February 2013: celiac disease – an obsolete disease.  Celiac disease used to be a disease that plagued many women, and when they went for a physical examination, almost nine times out of ten they would be diagnosed with celiac disease.  In China, prior to 2008 in Obstetrics and Gynecology, celiac disease was always there as a standard disease, and there was even talk about its clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment. But in reality, that was a misconception. Obstetrics and gynecology in China has been out of step with international practice for many years. Previously, obstetricians and gynecologists treated cervical epithelial ectropion during the physiological phase of the cervix as a pathological phenomenon and diagnosed it. In 2008, the 7th edition of the textbook “Obstetrics and Gynecology” for undergraduates already eliminated the name “cervical erosion” and replaced it with the physiological phenomenon of “cervical columnar epithelial ectasia”. So from that time on, the diagnosis of “cervical erosion” should have been eliminated in China, but due to the slow updating of many physicians’ knowledge, even five years after the revision of the undergraduate textbook, many physicians are still diagnosing “cervical erosion”.  Celiac disease, in the end, is actually a misconception of what used to be a normal manifestation of the cervix. Essentially, what is called cervical erosion is actually an ectropion of the columnar epithelium.  In the past medical textbooks, there was a so-called graded diagnosis of cervical erosion, called mild, moderate and severe, considering the size of the extent as the degree of inflammation, with less than 1/3 of the area being mild, 1/3-2/3 being moderate and more than 2/3 being severe. This is actually the different degree of columnar epithelial ectropion affected by estrogen, which is a normal physiological phenomenon.  The so-called “cervical erosion” is actually a normal physiological phenomenon that does not require any treatment! There is no impact on fertility either. Now if you go online and find many ways to treat celiac disease, they are all wrong.  At the same time, for symptomatic cervicitis, treatment is needed. The specific treatment method needs to be determined by different hospitals, but usually, acute inflammation can be treated with suppository medication, while chronic inflammation can be treated with physical therapy methods such as laser or freezing.  It should also be noted that regular examination of the cervix is necessary, this is not to prevent cervical erosion, but to prevent cervical cancer.  The occurrence of cervical cancer is related to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Some so-called high-risk HPV types of HPV are prone to precancerous lesions and cervical cancer when they persist in the squamocolumnar junction zone of the cervix. Cervical cancer has seen a substantial decrease in mortality since the availability of cervical smears, and the key is early prevention and treatment. Currently, it is recommended that women after the age of 21 should undergo annual cervical smear screening, and after the age of 30, they can be combined with HPV screening. If three consecutive HPV and cervical smear tests are negative, the interval can be extended to once every three years, and screening can be stopped after the age of 65.  Celiac disease, a common diagnosis and treatment misconception, one more woman knows, one less woman suffers!