In-Office Procedures
In-Office · No Hospital · No General Anesthesia

Cervical
Lesion Removal
Cervical polyps and benign cervical lesions — removed quickly in the office, often without anesthesia.

Schedule a Gynecologic Visit
5–15 Min
Procedure Time
Usually None
Anesthesia
Same-Day
Back to Normal
Setting
In-Office
Anesthesia
Usually None
Duration
5–15 Minutes
Recovery
Same-Day
Tissue
Sent to Pathology
Benign Cervical Lesions

Cervical Lesion Removal — In the Office, Often Without Anesthesia

Benign lesions on the cervix — most commonly cervical polyps and nabothian cysts — are among the most frequently encountered findings in gynecologic practice and among the easiest to treat. Cervical polyp removal is typically performed in the office in under five minutes, requires no anesthesia in most cases, and results in only minimal discomfort. Nabothian cysts — mucus-retention cysts on the cervical surface — are almost always observed rather than treated unless they are large, symptomatic, or have atypical features.

It is important to distinguish cervical lesion removal from LEEP (Loop Electrosurgical Excision Procedure), which treats cervical dysplasia — precancerous cell changes identified on Pap smear and biopsy. LEEP is a surgical procedure performed in the operating room or office specifically for CIN (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia). Cervical polyp removal and other benign lesion treatment are distinct, simpler procedures that address structural growths rather than cellular dysplasia.

All tissue removed from the cervix is sent to pathology regardless of clinical appearance. Cervical polyps are benign in the vast majority of cases — but rare exceptions exist, and histologic confirmation is the standard of care.

Lesions Treated

Cervical Lesions Addressed In the Office

The following cervical findings are treated at Lapeer Women’s Health. Assessment of the lesion on examination determines whether in-office removal is appropriate.

Cervical polyps

The most common cervical lesion — a fleshy, pedunculated growth extending from the cervical canal or ectocervix. Usually asymptomatic but can cause intermenstrual or postcoital bleeding. Removed by twisting or snipping the stalk and sending to pathology.

Nabothian cysts (selected cases)

Mucus-retention cysts on the cervical surface that appear as smooth, pale, slightly raised bumps. Almost always benign and typically observed. Larger cysts or those with atypical features on examination may warrant treatment or biopsy.

Cervical condyloma

HPV-related warts on the ectocervix — treated by excision or ablation in the office. Cervical condyloma frequently coexist with vaginal and vulvar condyloma and are addressed in the context of full evaluation and treatment planning.

Ectropion causing significant symptoms

Cervical ectropion — columnar epithelium visible on the ectocervix — is a normal variant in most cases. When it causes significant discharge or bleeding, treatment options including office cautery may be discussed.

Mucus polyp at the cervical os

A small mucus polyp visible at or protruding from the external cervical os — removed quickly in the office with ring forceps or scissors. Pathology confirms benign endocervical tissue.

Cervical lesion of uncertain type requiring biopsy

Any cervical lesion with features that make its nature uncertain — irregular surface, abnormal vascularity, or clinical findings that differ from a simple polyp — is biopsied and sent to pathology before any definitive treatment is considered.

What to Expect

Cervical Polyp Removal and Other Cervical Procedures

Cervical polyp removal is the simplest and most common cervical in-office procedure. It typically takes five minutes and requires no anesthesia. Other cervical procedures are similarly brief.

1

Speculum Placement and Visualization

A speculum is placed to visualize the cervix directly. Dr. Andrei examines the lesion — assessing its appearance, stalk, and whether it is appropriate for immediate removal or requires biopsy first.

2

Removal (Usually Without Anesthesia)

For cervical polyps, Dr. Andrei grasps the polyp stalk with ring forceps and uses a twisting motion to detach it at the base — or snips it with scissors. Most women feel only mild pressure and brief cramping. No injection is required in the majority of cases.

3

Hemostasis

The base of the polyp is inspected for bleeding. In most cases, the site stops bleeding quickly without intervention. If needed, gentle cautery or silver nitrate application controls the bleeding site.

4

Pathology and Instructions

The removed specimen is sent to pathology. You receive brief discharge instructions. Results are available in one to two weeks. Most women return to normal activity immediately after the appointment.

After Cervical Polyp Removal

Mild cramping and light spotting for one to two days are expected and normal. Avoid intercourse and tampons for one week. Normal daily activity is appropriate immediately. Call the office if you experience heavy bleeding or significant pain. Pathology results are reviewed with you within two weeks of the procedure.

Before Your Appointment

Questions About Cervical Lesion Removal

Most women feel only mild pressure and brief cramping — similar to a Pap smear. No anesthesia injection is required for simple polyp removal, which makes it more comfortable than procedures that do require local anesthesia. The entire procedure takes under five minutes in most cases.
Cervical polyps are benign in the vast majority of cases — malignant degeneration is very rare, reported in less than 1% of cases in most series. However, all removed cervical tissue is sent to pathology as a standard precaution. If pathology reveals unexpected findings, Dr. Andrei discusses next steps promptly.
Yes — cervical polyps are one of the most common benign causes of intermenstrual bleeding and postcoital bleeding (bleeding after intercourse). Removal resolves the bleeding in most cases. If bleeding persists after polyp removal, further evaluation of the uterine cavity is indicated.
Cervical polyp removal removes a benign structural growth — a polyp — from the cervix. LEEP (Loop Electrosurgical Excision Procedure) removes a layer of the cervical transformation zone to treat dysplasia — precancerous cell changes identified on Pap smear and biopsy. They are completely different procedures addressing different conditions. LEEP requires an OR or a specifically equipped office setup; cervical polyp removal does not.
In-Office
No Hospital Required
MD, PhD, FACOG
Board-Certified Gynecologist
Same-Day
No Recovery Period
Gynecology Only
Lapeer & Rochester Hills
Schedule a Cervical Lesion Evaluation

Cervical Polyp or Lesion?
Five Minutes. Same Day. Pathology Confirmed.

Cervical polyp removal is one of the quickest procedures in gynecology — done in the office, typically without anesthesia, with all tissue sent to pathology. Schedule at either Lapeer or Rochester Hills.

Lapeer Office
(810) 969-4670
Rochester Hills
(248) 923-3522

Gynecologic care for women of every age

Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307

Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.