Knowing what to do next after an abnormal pap can be both confusing, anxiety producing and a matter of the prevailing gynecologic thought. So if you thing your gyno has been changing her mind, you are lightly right, but you may also have choices. We are most concerned with women who have been diagnosed with the most severe pap smear changes that are not cervical cancers, but have to be carefully monitored.Moderate and severe dysplasia, also called CIN II and III is diagnosed in 500,000 American women each
year. Aggressive diagnosis and treatment has lead to successful prevention of
cancer and death. But then what is next for these women? Here is where guidelines for care have gotten a bit confusing. Choice and careful follow up is usually the best. For many of us who
treat young women it’s important to be able to discuss what may be recommended by the next gyno, as many women will move and have several gynos over time and several follow up strategies offered. Your abnormal pap condition
may have been treated, but remember, the virus or the condition that led to the acquisition
of the virus is often still present, and the future gyno plan is debated among
eperts, as explained in the November "Green Journal" Obstetrics and Gynecology, talks about women who have been
completely treated, with clear margins on LEEP or conizations (operations to clear the CIN) can be followed by some combination of
pelvic exams, HPV tests, type specific HPV plans, pap smears and colposcopies. And the guidelines do
offer some flexibilities. No where do women have unlimited medical coverage for
these follow up tests, so that cost effectiveness was the goal of the recent study undertaken by the newest group to look into this. The article clearly states
that the precise order of tests, the timing of the tests, and the number of
tests that an individual woman should have to maximize safety or to be
reasonably safe has actually not yet been determined. This article evaluated 12 (!)
different strategies on the most moderate risk individuals, as women with
extensive residual disease, and multifocal (lots of spots, like in the vagina as well as on the cervix, or in the rectum) disease are the most high risk.
They don't talk about women who have complicating STDs like Herpes or CT at the time of follow up, those are also separate cases. Other strategies are possibly as effective or more effective, just so women can
know that they need to understand some basics when evaluating what advice they
are getting.So, to make this clear, you need to sit down with your gyno and come up with a personal plan, based on your own goals, and your own risks, and your own cost effectiveness thoughts.
Decidual Cast Periods can be fairly easy, passing some tissue at a time, or off can come the whole lining in one piece called a decidual cast. Generally the lining of the uterus is only 6-8 mm thick at the time of the menstrual period, and it is shed gradually, a few cells at a time. The decidual cast is when the entire lining passes spontaneously. It's not uncommon, but it usually both uncomfortable, and alarming to some. But us women are designed to have some sort of periods Or Not? We have to pass tissue each month. Or Not? Are they good for us? Or Not? Do we want them? Or Not? Is this something that is individual? Or Not? It's a complex topic that I will be discussing a lot over my time in this blog. So lets start with basics: How much do we bleed and what are we loosing, and just what was this that the patient passed? And another basic: track your periods, and the Women's Health Practice site http://www.womenshealthpractice.com/media/pdf/menstrual_chart.pdf you...
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