How soon can you get pregnant after cervical cancer surgery

  Cervical cancer is the most common gynecological malignancy. The high incidence age of in situ cancer is 30 to 35 years old, and that of invasive cancer is 45 to 55 years old; in recent years, there is a trend of its incidence becoming younger. The common application of cervical cytology screening in recent decades has enabled early detection and treatment of cervical cancer and precancerous lesions, and the incidence and mortality rate of cervical cancer have been significantly reduced.  Symptoms of cervical cancer 1. Vaginal bleeding: early stage is mostly contact bleeding; middle and late stage is irregular vaginal bleeding. The amount of bleeding varies according to the size of lesion and invasion of interstitial blood vessels, and may cause heavy bleeding if it invades large blood vessels. Younger patients may also present with prolonged periods and increased menstrual flow; older patients often have irregular vaginal bleeding after menopause. Generally, the exogenous type has vaginal bleeding symptoms earlier and more bleeding; the endogenous type has the symptoms later.  2.Vaginal discharge: Most patients have vaginal discharge, which is white or bloody, thin like water or rice slop, or smells fishy. In advanced stage, due to necrosis of cancer tissue and infection, there may be a lot of rice-soup-like or purulent foul-smelling leucorrhea.  3.Late symptoms: different secondary symptoms may appear according to the extent of involvement of cancer foci. Such as urinary frequency, urinary urgency, constipation, swelling and pain of lower limbs, etc.; when cancer presses or involves ureter, it may cause ureteral obstruction, hydronephrosis and uremia; in late stage, there may be anemia, cachexia and other symptoms of systemic failure.  How long can I get pregnant after surgery?  It is recommended to consider having children after five years after cervical cancer surgery because the recurrence rate is relatively high five years after surgery. It is impossible to preserve fertility after hysterectomy for cervical cancer. However, patients with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia cervical neoplasia stage I and II can be treated conservatively, such as electrocoagulation, condensation, laser, cervical conization, etc., and close follow-up is required after the surgery, because conservative treatment preserves the uterus, so fertility is also preserved.  Cervical cancer in situ can be completely cured by cervical conization treatment, and it has no effect on future pregnancy; if it is middle and late stage surgery, one of them is that the excision range is larger, and even the whole uterus needs to be removed, and the post-operative treatment requires long-term medication and radiation therapy, so it may affect pregnancy.  Therefore, it is not impossible for cervical cancer patients to desire to have a baby after surgery, as long as we have hope and try to overcome the disease bravely, there is hope for everything.