How To Detect Cervical Cancer


Detecting Cervical Cancer

 

            Cervical cancer can be deadly, but there are many prevention techniques, early detection signs, and yearly appointments that prevent cervical cancer from becoming dangerous to your health.  Cervical cancer Is extremely easy to detect early, as long as you know how to detect cervical cancer.

                Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable and easiest to detect cancers, thanks to regular Pap smear tests.  It is recommended that a woman starts getting regular pap smear tests three years after becoming sexually active or when they reach the age of twenty-one, whichever one comes first.   A woman should continue getting regular pap smear tests every year or two, and if their previous tests have been fine, they can start decreasing the frequency to once every three years when they are thirty.  Then after the age 65, they are no longer needed as long as previous tests have been normal.

            Pap smear test are the easiest way to detect cervical cancer, and it can detect cervical cancer in the earliest of stages.  During a Pap smear tests your doctor will brush your cervix with a small cotton swab to obtain cells from your cervix.  Then he or she will send them to a lab to be tested for various things, one of them being cervical cancer.  If you keep up on your screening then you can rest assure that if you were to have cervical cancer, it would be detected in the earliest of stages.

            The Pap smear tests for other things as well, such as sexually transmitted diseases or HPV.  If you were to have this, it could cause cervical cancer later down the road, so it is important to detect this early as well, which you will if you are tested regularly.  By obtaining your DNA from your cervix, the lab test can tell if your cells may turn cancerous, and you can take action early, before the cervical cancer even begins.

            Besides getting regular Pap smear tests, there are symptoms and signs you can look for.  Symptoms are unexplained vaginal bleeding, watery bloody vaginal discharge with foul odor, or pelvic pain and pain during intercourse. 

            If your Pap smear results show cancerous cells or if you are having these symptoms, you may have to undergo further testing before you are diagnosed with cervical cancer.  There are three major tests used to diagnose cervical cancer.  One test is a colposcopy where your doctor examines your cervix.  The next is where your doctor removes part of the unusual cells in your cervix and performs a biopsy on them to determine if they are cancerous or not.  Your doctor also may have to take a deeper layers of your cervix by performing a cone biopsy, or conization.

            So as you can see, as long as you are healthy and see the doctor every year or two, then you can always prevent cervical cancer before it even begins, or you can detect it as well.  Be sure to go to your doctor for your yearly check-ups when needed, and do not neglect yourself.  If you are in fear of having cervical cancer keep in mind that it is very rare because of all the precautions and preventions available today.  Also, be sure you do not diagnose yourself; you do not have it until the results prove that you do.

 

 

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