What is Lsil mild dysplasia?

What is Lsil mild dysplasia?

Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL) is a common abnormal result on a Pap test. It’s also known as mild dysplasia. LSIL means that your cervical cells show mild abnormalities. A LSIL, or abnormal Pap result, doesn’t mean that you have cancer. The tissue that covers your cervix is made up of squamous cells.

Is cervical dysplasia considered cancer?

Cervical dysplasia is not cancer, but may become cancer and spread to nearby normal tissue. Cervical changes. The cervix is the lower, narrow end of the uterus that forms a canal between the uterus and vagina.

How is low-grade cervical dysplasia treated?

Cervical dysplasia treatment

  1. Cryosurgery to freeze off the abnormal cervical tissue.
  2. LEEP (loop electrosurgical excision procedure) to burn off the abnormal cells with an electric looped wire.
  3. Surgery to remove the abnormal cells with a laser, scalpel, or both.

Can I get pregnant with mild cervical dysplasia?

Will cervical abnormalities affect a pregnancy? Whether you need treatment before trying to fall pregnant depends on the cell change severity. Women with low-grade abnormalities who are up to date with their Pap smears are fine to go ahead and conceive.

How do you treat mild dysplasia?

Treatment for moderate-to-severe dysplasia or mild dysplasia that does not go away may include:

  1. Cryosurgery to freeze abnormal cells.
  2. Laser therapy, which uses light to burn away abnormal tissue.
  3. LEEP (loop electrosurgical excision procedure), which uses electricity to remove abnormal tissue.

Does mild dysplasia mean HPV?

Among the HPVs that infect the genital tract, certain types typically cause warts or mild dysplasia (“low-risk” types; HPV-6, HPV-11), while other types (known as “high-risk” HPV types) are more strongly associated with severe dysplasia and cervical cancer (HPV-16, HPV-18).

Posted In Q&A