Celiac disease used to be a “disease” that afflicted many women. In the past, it has always existed as a standard disease in medical textbooks, and has even been talked about its clinical manifestations, diagnosis and treatment. What exactly triggers celiac disease, and is it a pathological phenomenon or not? And is it necessary to start treatment or not? What affects the color of the cervix? More than 100 years ago, when doctors observed the reddish color of a woman’s cervix, they called it “celiac disease” because it looked like eczema-like skin eruptions. But in fact, there is no real erosion, but due to hormonal influences, the squamous epithelium on the outside of the cervical opening and the columnar epithelium on the inside of the cervix at the junction of the displacement – because the columnar epithelium is thinner, so whenever the columnar epithelium is more exposed will reveal the blood vessels underneath, appearing to be reddish in color there. So, celiac disease is hormonally induced and is a normal physiological phenomenon. Many small baby girls just born on the phenomenon of “cervical erosion”, but the newborn child where there will be cervical damage, that is actually affected by the mother’s pregnancy hormone levels in the body to increase the impact of the mother’s body to leave the mother, the baby girl’s this “erosion” will also be The cervical damage is actually affected by the mother’s increased hormone levels during pregnancy. In addition, menopausal women also do not have celiac disease. This further suggests that hormonal changes are the cause of celiac disease. Since celiac disease does not really occur, should I treat it? Traditional textbooks believe that celiac disease must be treated because it implies the presence of cervical inflammation, and long-term inflammatory stimulation can cause a lot of harm to women, possibly causing infertility and even cervical cancer. However, according to the current medical concept, “celiac disease” is only a symptomatic description rather than a clinical diagnosis, and what the doctor has to do is to determine whether it is related to cervical lesions or just due to hormonal changes based on the symptom. For the latter, the doctor will judge by asking about the menstrual cycle, and no treatment is needed at all; while for the former, cervical cytology is needed to check for inflammation, pre-cancerous lesions and so on, and if problems are found, then histological diagnosis will be done to confirm the severity of the problem. Also, a virology test for HPV is a must. If it is just caused by inflammation, there is no need to make a big fuss because just like rhinitis and pharyngitis, occasional inflammation of the cervix is a normal thing, as long as the symptoms of some particular discomfort are treated symptomatically.