Healthy Datas Q&A Women’s Health

Can cervical erosion be recovered?

Asked by:Blackwell

Asked on:Apr 17, 2026 02:00 PM

Answers:1 Views:341
  • Bird Bird

    Apr 17, 2026

    Cervical erosion is usually reversible and is mostly a physiological change rather than a disease. Cervical erosion may be related to factors such as increased estrogen levels during puberty and hormonal changes during pregnancy. A small number of cases may be related to pathological factors such as chronic cervicitis and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.

    Cervical erosion caused by increased estrogen levels is mostly a physiological phenomenon, manifested by the outward migration of cervical columnar epithelium and a red and granular appearance. This condition will naturally subside as hormone levels drop, and is more common in adolescent women or pregnant women after childbirth. No special treatment is required on a daily basis, just keep the vulva clean and dry and avoid excessive vaginal washing. If combined with increased secretions or contact bleeding, infection needs to be ruled out and prompt medical treatment is required.

    Chronic cervicitis may cause pathological erosion, often caused by mycoplasma, chlamydia and other pathogenic infections, accompanied by abnormal leucorrhea or bleeding during sexual intercourse. At this time, you need to follow the doctor's advice and use anti-metritis tablets, Baofukang suppositories and other drugs to treat the primary infection. Erosive changes caused by cervical intraepithelial neoplasia need to be diagnosed through colposcopy, and intervention measures such as laser treatment (such as carbon dioxide laser) or cervical conization can be selected according to the degree of the disease.

    It is recommended to perform combined cervical TCT and HPV screening once a year and avoid using folk remedies to flush the vagina. Pay attention to supplementing vitamin A and vitamin E in the diet, and eating appropriate amounts of carrots, nuts and other foods can help epithelial repair. When symptoms such as abnormal leucorrhea and irregular bleeding occur, you should see a gynecologist as soon as possible to determine the nature of the erosion before formulating a targeted recovery plan.

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