Cervicitis with squamous refers to chronic cervicitis with squamous epithelial hyperplasia. Chronic cervicitis is defined as a chronic inflammatory cell infiltration of the interstitium of the uterine cervix with a large number of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and other chronic inflammatory cells, which may be accompanied by hyperplasia of the adenoepithelium and mesenchymal stroma of the uterine cervix and squamous epithelial hyperplasia. Chronic cervicitis with squamatization is a benign pathologic finding on cervical biopsy. Due to inflammatory factors, the columnar epithelium exposed to the vaginal part of the uterine cervix is subjected to the acidic environment of the vagina, and the undifferentiated reserve cells under the columnar epithelium begin to proliferate and gradually transform into squamous epithelium, and then the columnar epithelium is detached, and is replaced by complex squamous cells. If you are diagnosed with chronic cervicitis with squamous epithelialization, it is recommended that you consult a medical professional for active treatment under the doctor’s guidance.