Do I need treatment for mycoplasma positive?

Patient: No contraception for a year, no pregnancy, went to the hospital and had a second degree cervical erosion and a little high serum prolactin. Mycoplasma solium and Mycoplasma humanum were positive. The doctor said there was pelvic inflammatory disease and had not checked whether the fallopian tubes were open and the ovaries and uterus were normal. My husband also had a semen test before and his sperm activity was not strong. Do I need treatment for mycoplasma positive? What are the general symptoms? Does celiac disease need to be treated? 1, has been more than a year without contraception not pregnant, mycoplasma positive is the need for treatment. 2. The examination of the fallopian tubes needs to be done after the mycoplasma is normal. 3, Mycoplasma positive may have pelvic inflammatory disease, fallopian tube problems. To determine whether there is pelvic inflammatory disease, a gynecological double examination is needed. To determine the presence of tubal problems, hysterosalpingogram or hysterosalpingogram is needed. 4. When one partner has mycoplasma infection or genital inflammation, the spouse needs to be examined. Mycoplasma infection in the male partner may affect the semen and lead to semen abnormalities such as weak sperm or positive anti-sperm membrane antibodies. 5. Cervical erosion is not actually a disease, it is an ectopic cervical columnar epithelium. If there is cervical canal inflammation will lead to abnormal secretion, making it difficult for sperm to pass through the cervix or leading to inflammatory upstream infection, it is recommended to actively treat cervical canal inflammation. If there is no abnormal discharge it has no effect on fertility and does not require treatment.