Colposcopy
A simple, 10 to 15 minute procedure that is performed at your OBGYN office. You are positioned on the examination table like you are for a Pap smear. After the OBGYN doctor preps you for the procedure, he/she will then use a colposcope – which is a large, microscope that is positioned in front of the vagina to view your cervix. A bright light on the end of the colposcope lets your gynecologist see the cervix clearly. While doing the colposcopy, the OBGYN doctor will focus on the areas of the cervix where changes in an abnormal cervix are seen as white areas. The whiter the area is, the worse the cervical dysplasia is. Abnormal vascular (blood vessel) changes are also apparent through the colposcope. Typically, the worse the vascular changes are, the worse the dysplasia.
If your Obstetrician/Gynecologist can see an abnormal area with the colposcope, a tissue biopsy is then taken from the abnormal area and sent to the lab for more testing. Note that your doctor may do more than just one Biopsy. How many biopsies depend on how many abnormal areas he/she finds. Once the biopsies are done, the doctor will then do an ECC also known as an Endocervical Curettage – which takes samples from the canal of the cervix. Test results are usually back within two weeks at which time your doctor will have you come back to the office to go over the results and determine what will be the next best step to take. After the procedure, the doctor recommends no sex, tampons, or douching for 2 weeks or until you come back in for the results. This is so your cervix heals from the biopsies.




