Diseasewiki.com

Home - Disease list page 83

English | 中文 | Русский | Français | Deutsch | Español | Português | عربي | 日本語 | 한국어 | Italiano | Ελληνικά | ภาษาไทย | Tiếng Việt |

Search

Cervical condyloma

  Cervical condyloma is a sexually transmitted disease caused by human papillomavirus (HPV). In the early stage, it is small, soft, and pale red warts, which gradually increase in size and show papillary, mushroom-like, or cauliflower-like surfaces, sometimes with a peduncle. 863 biotechnology has fundamentally solved the cause of recurrent condyloma acuminatum, which can be cured in 3-5 days. Through clinical application in 36540 cases, the efficacy is obvious and long-lasting. Follow-up for 6 months to 3 years shows no recurrence. For the treatment of cervical condyloma, local destructive treatment should generally be adopted, such as laser, cryotherapy, and electrocoagulation. Local treatment should be performed before 34 weeks of gestation in pregnant women with cervical condyloma to avoid complications such as cervical laceration during delivery; cesarean section should be performed if there is a large cervical condyloma at full term. Most HPV infections of the cervix are subclinical, the lesions are generally small, and they are often discovered under colposcopy after applying 5% acetic acid, showing blurred white or slightly glossy white lesions with irregular contours and jagged, multifaceted, or feather-like edges. Satellite lesions can spread beyond the transitional zone, and capillary networks can also be seen. The typical findings in histopathological examination are papillary hyperplasia of the epidermis, with hollow cells visible in the stratum corneum and stratum spinosum.

Table of Contents

1. What are the causes of cervical condyloma
2. What complications can cervical condyloma lead to
3. What are the typical symptoms of cervical condyloma
4. How to prevent cervical condyloma
5. What laboratory tests are needed for cervical condyloma
6. Dietary taboos for patients with cervical condyloma
7. The conventional methods of Western medicine for treating cervical condyloma

1. What are the causes of cervical condyloma?

  The main cause of condyloma acuminatum is direct sexual contact transmission, accounting for 95% of the incidence rate. Indirect transmission includes sharing underwear, bedding, and nail trimming tools, etc. HPV carriers can easily transmit the virus to sexual partners through sexual contact, and can also be infected by contacting the external genitalia with contaminated items such as bath towels, bathtubs, underwear, and medical supplies. There are also cases of not paying attention to the hygiene of the genital area or not washing hands before defecation.

2. What complications can cervical condyloma acuminata lead to?

  Cervical condyloma acuminata is caused by human papillomavirus infection, which can cause various warts to grow on the labia majora, vaginal orifice, urethral orifice, vaginal wall, etc. At the same time, the virus can also infect the cervix and cause cervicitis, which is not given enough attention by people. Many patients only pay attention to the treatment of obvious warts on the vulva and ignore the hidden dangers caused by the virus invading the cervix.

  Cervical HPV infection has the risk of developing into cervical cancer. Early and thorough treatment of condyloma acuminata is helpful to reduce the incidence of cervical cancer. Vaginoscopy can detect atypical epithelium, atypical blood vessels, and early cancer changes in the cervix early on, and accurately select suspicious areas for biopsy. Cervical condyloma acuminata is a great harm to women, and if not treated in time, it may affect fertility.

3. What are the typical symptoms of cervical condyloma acuminata?

  Cervical condyloma acuminata is caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and is transmitted through sexual contact, commonly occurring in young women. The symptoms of cervical condyloma acuminata often manifest as a few faintly pink soft small papules at the beginning, which gradually increase in size and number, tend to fuse or overlap with each other, and have an irregular surface resembling warts. The symptoms of cervical condyloma acuminata may include itching, burning pain, or pressure sensation. Anal and rectal condyloma acuminata may have pain and a sense of urgency. Vaginal and cervical condyloma acuminata may have pain during sexual intercourse and an increase in leukorrhea.

4. How to prevent cervical condyloma acuminata?

  1. Pay attention to personal hygiene and avoid unclean sexual intercourse and sexual promiscuity.Sexual contact is the main mode of transmission of this disease. Prevention should focus on avoiding unclean sexual intercourse and sexual promiscuity. In addition, a few can be infected through indirect contact, and attention should be paid to personal hygiene, not sharing daily necessities such as towels, underwear, bathtubs, etc.

  2. Early detection, early diagnosis, and early treatment.Most cervical HPV infections are subclinical, and relying solely on visual identification will result in the misdiagnosis of a large number of patients. There is evidence that the clinical misdiagnosis rate of cervical condyloma acuminata reaches 85%, which becomes the cause of recurrence and spread. Moreover, cervical HPV infection has the risk of developing into cervical cancer. Early and thorough treatment is helpful to reduce the incidence of cervical cancer. Vaginoscopy can detect atypical epithelium, atypical blood vessels, and early cancer changes in the cervix early on, and accurately select suspicious areas for biopsy. It has been shown that the coincidence rate of vaginoscopy and pathological diagnosis is 99%.

5. What kind of laboratory tests are needed for cervical condyloma acuminata?

  1. Physical examination:After women are infected with cervical condyloma acuminata, due to local dampness and chronic stimulation, it often promotes its rapid growth, forming different morphological lesions such as papillary, cauliflower-like, cockscomb-like, or mushroom-like, with soft texture, easy to bleed when touched. The surface is often white, dirty, or red due to secretion infiltration. The base of the wart is usually narrow with a peduncle, moist, often with exudation, erosion, and fissures in the skin damage, which are prone to secondary bacterial infection and the release of malodorous substances.

  2. Auxiliary examination:Vaginal mirror examination, polymerase chain reaction detection, histological examination.

6. Dietary taboos for cervical condyloma acuminata patients

  1. Patients should pay attention to consistently taking honey or royal jelly to enhance their own resistance and immunity. The recurrence of condyloma acuminata often occurs when the resistance is low.

  2. You can eat some mushrooms, which contain a large amount of polysaccharides and can effectively improve the cell immune function of patients, thereby reducing the recurrence rate of condyloma acuminata.

  3. Eat more protein-rich foods and exercise at the same time.

  4. After removing the condyloma acuminata, you should quit smoking and drinking. Each cigarette can cause the body to lose about 3 to 5 milligrams of vitamin C, and vitamin C is an important vitamin to enhance immunity. Eat less seafood.

7. Conventional methods of Western medicine for treating cervical condyloma acuminata

  After women are infected with cervical condyloma acuminata, due to local damp heat and chronic stimulation, it often promotes its rapid growth, forming symptoms of different morphologies such as乳头状, cauliflower-like, cockscomb-like, or mushroom-like, with soft texture, easy to bleed when touched, due to secretion infiltration, the surface is often white, dirty, or red, the base of the wart is narrow and often pedunculated, the surface is moist, often with exudation, erosion, and fissures in the skin damage often have purulent secretion accumulation, easy to secondary bacterial infection, and spread foul smell. So, how should cervical condyloma acuminata be treated?

  The drug treatment method for cervical condyloma acuminata can be to apply medication to the cervix using tail gauze: fold the disinfected gauze into a one-centimeter square small block (about 20-30 layers of gauze), tie it with a thread, leaving about 10 centimeters of thread, leave it outside the vagina when applying the medication, drop 20-30 drops of medication onto the gauze block and place it inside the vagina (make sure the gauze block is close to the affected area), remove it after 4 hours, once a day, use it for 3 consecutive days, then stop taking the medicine. First use A for three days, rest for 5 or 6 days, then use B for three days, and review after a week. It is worth noting that any treatment method should be carried out under the guidance of a professional doctor, and should not be taken blindly without medical advice, in order to avoid accidents.

  For those who are ineffective or recurrently relapse with the above treatments, traditional Chinese medicine and Chinese herbal medicine are often used in clinical practice. From years of clinical evidence, traditional Chinese medicine and Chinese herbal medicine have a good effect on those who have been treated for a long time and recurrently relapse, with a high cure rate.

Recommend: Cervical ectropion , Allergic vaginitis , Hyperprolactinemia , Cervical squamous cell carcinoma , Cornual pregnancy , Dysfunctional uterine bleeding

<<< Prev Next >>>



Copyright © Diseasewiki.com

Powered by Ce4e.com