Sexual Health
Can cervical cancer be inherited? 8 major causes and 8 precautions for cervical cancer
Cervical cancer is a familiar malignant tumor and a serious gynecological disease. It poses a particularly serious threat to female patients, not only affecting their normal life and work, but also posing a serious threat to their physical health and safety.
Can cervical cancer be inherited
Although research on the relationship between cervical cancer and genetics is still ongoing, it cannot be denied that long-term cohabitation has the same lifestyle habits, pathogenic factors, and disease susceptibility. It is recommended that married women and women with a history of sexual activity regularly participate in cervical cancer screening to prevent early detection of cervical abnormalities. If abnormal cervical tissue (such as precancerous lesions) is detected before uterine cancer changes, it can be eradicated through certain minimally invasive surgeries (such as LEEP knife minimally invasive surgery), and the threat of cervical cancer can be terminated in advance.
Causes of cervical cancer
1. Multiple sexual partners: The cervical tissue cells of young girls are not yet mature and relatively soft, sensitive to external carcinogens and cancer promoting substances. Sexual partners are carriers of cancer cells, and it is easy to plant cancer cells in the immature cervical tissue of young girls during sexual intercourse.
2. Sexual intercourse frequency: Sperm antibodies are produced after entering the vagina, and these antibodies generally disappear around 4 months. The more sexual partners, the more frequent sexual intercourse, and the production of various antibodies (heterologous proteins) that enter the female body in a short period of time, hindering sperm antibody reactions, and easily developing cervical cancer.
3. Chronic cervicitis: Various pathogenic bacteria and viruses (especially the human papillomavirus of genital warts) in male smegma repeatedly stimulate the lower reproductive tract and cervical epithelium of young women prematurely, and chronic cervicitis ultimately transforms into cervical cancer.
4. Menstrual and delivery factors: Women with poor menstrual hygiene and prolonged periods, as well as those with significantly increased risk of cervical cancer during the postpartum period, are also high-risk patients for gynecological tumors such as cervical cancer.
5. Causes of disease: Herpes simplex virus type II, human papillomavirus, human cytomegalovirus, and fungal infections may be related to the occurrence of cervical cancer. However, the issues of which virus is the main inducer and which virus cooperates to easily develop cervical cancer have not been resolved. In short, women should clean themselves regularly to prevent bacterial infections