What are cervical glandular cysts?

  Cervical glandular cysts, also called cervical nuchal cysts, are usually not a disease, but a physiological change of the cervix, which is actually a fluid accumulation in the cervical glandular ducts.  The cervical nuchal cyst is mainly due to the new squamous epithelium, which in the process of replacing the columnar epithelium, covers the mouth of the cervical ducts or directly penetrates into the mouth of the cervical ducts, blocking the cervical ducts, thus causing the fluid in the cervical ducts to be unable to drain and form cysts after a long time of accumulation. Since cervical nuchal translucency is not cancerous and does not cause abnormal leucorrhea and has no effect on women’s health, there is usually no need to treat it with medication after it is detected and the medication is not very useful. However, for women with particularly large cervical nuchal cysts, if you want to get rid of them, you can consider surgery to puncture the cyst and drain the fluid from it.  However, after surgery, if the squamous epithelium again covers the glandular ducts and causes blockage, the cervical cyst may recur.