Former dean Nuss honored with OB-GYN lifetime achievement award
March 22, 2018
Robert C. Nuss, MD, former dean of the University of Florida College of Medicine – Jacksonville, has received the 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award from the…
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The Colposcopy Clinic at UF Health Jacksonville is specifically designed to evaluate patients who have an abnormal Pap smear. Patients are referred to these clinics by their physicians.
A Pap smear is a test where the doctor examines the inside of your vagina and takes a gentle scraping of cells from your cervix. Women should get a Pap smear once a year to screen for cervical dysplasia (pre-cancer) and cancer. Cervical cancer is a common cancer among women and is easy to detect and treat in the early stages (pre-cancer).
You will either be treated with antibiotics (for infection) or your Pap smear may be repeated in three months (many times, a Pap smear will revert back to normal on its own). Also, your doctor may recommend that you undergo a special test called colposcopy.
Colposcopy is a special test in which the doctor puts a vinegar solution in your vagina to highlight the abnormal areas and then looks at your cervix with a special microscope. If any areas of pre-cancer are found, a biopsy may be taken from that area. This may also include a special biopsy from the cervical (birth) canal called an endocervical curettage, ECC. A biopsy provides a definite diagnosis that a Pap smear can not make.
You can usually return to work the same day. You may have some mild cramping and some light bleeding for a few days, but taking ibuprofen or aspirin and using your usual menstrual hygiene will relieve any discomfort. You should not have sex for 2-4 weeks after your biopsy.
March 22, 2018
Robert C. Nuss, MD, former dean of the University of Florida College of Medicine – Jacksonville, has received the 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award from the…