Cervical mucositis can be categorized into acute cervical mucositis and chronic cervical mucositis, and the treatment varies depending on the type. In case of acute cervical canal mucositis, antibiotics are required for treatment. If it is chronic cervical mucositis, it can be treated with medication first, and physical therapy if necessary.
1. If acute cervical mucositis is identified, it can be treated with empiric antibiotics as well as pathogen-specific antibiotics. For patients with risk factors, drugs such as doxycycline or azithromycin can be chosen empirically. If a Neisseria gonorrhea infection is identified, ceftriaxone sodium can be injected. If it is Chlamydia trachomatis infection, doxycycline or ofloxacin can be taken.
2. If the examination is chronic cervical mucositis, you need to know whether there is Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae re-infection, and if it is infected, you need to choose antibiotics for the pathogens, and your sexual partner should be treated with medication as well. If there is contact bleeding, you can use drugs such as povidone suppositories to treat it. If the effect of medication is not good, you can do physical therapy such as laser.