What is the early symptom of cervical polyp

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Cervical polyp is a clinical manifestation of chronic cervicitis, a common gynecological disease. It is because chronic inflammation stimulates the local hyperplasia of cervical mucosa, and because the uterus itself has the tendency of rejection, the hyperplastic mucosa gradually protrudes from the base to the outer mouth of the cervix and forms a polyp like change. Let's take a look at the following.

What is the early symptom of cervical polyp

First: most of the uterine polyps are benign, and there are a few malignant changes. The malignant change rate is 0.2-0.4%. If cervical polyps are removed, they often recur.

Second: cervical polyps mostly occur in 40-60 years old multipara. Polyps very small patients do not have any symptoms, most of them are due to other diseases in gynecological examination just found. A small number of patients with large polyps show an increase in leucorrhea, or there is a trace of blood in the center of leucorrhea, or even a small amount of vaginal bleeding, that is, bloody leucorrhea or contact bleeding, especially after sexual intercourse and squatting stool.

Third: large polyps are easy to find in double diagnosis, but small polyps can only be seen after exposing the cervix with vaginal speculum. Polyps may occasionally have malignant lesions or coexist with them, so polyps must not be found, that is, no further examination. Cervical scraping should be done for cytological examination before polyps are sent for pathological examination.

matters needing attention

Cervical polyps mostly occur in 40-60 years old multipara; patients with very small polyps do not have any discomfort symptoms. Most of the symptoms of cervical polyps are found in gynecological examination due to other diseases. A small number of patients with large polyps show an increase in leucorrhea, or there is a trace of blood in the center of leucorrhea, or even a small amount of vaginal bleeding, that is, bloody leucorrhea or contact bleeding, especially after sexual intercourse and squatting stool.