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 Introduction to Cervical Cancer   Print Search Glossary Help
Introduction to Cervical Cancer | Risk Factors | Signs & Symptoms | Survival Rates | Unit Review & Quiz

The uterus, a hollow, pear-shaped organ, is located in a woman's lower abdomen, between the bladder and the rectum. The cervix (from Latin "neck") is the lower, narrow part of the uterus, forming a canal that opens into the vagina, which leads to the outside of the body.

Cervical cancer occurs when normal cells in the cervix change into cancer cells. This normally takes several years to happen, but it can also happen in a very short period of time. Cervical cancer can be detectable by cytological study of epidermal cells removed from the cervix in a process known as the pap smear. Each year, about 15,000 women in the United States learn that they have cancer of the cervix.

Squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL) is a general term for the abnormal growth of squamous cells on the surface of the cervix. (The word 'lesion' refers to an area of abnormal tissue; 'intraepithelial' means that the abnormal cells are present only in the surface layer of the cervix.) The changes in the cells are described as low grade or high grade, depending on how much of the cervix is affected and how abnormal the cells are.

If abnormal cells spread deeper into the cervix or to other tissues or organs, the disease is then called cervical cancer, or invasive cervical cancer. It occurs most often in women over the age of 40.

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