I'm no expert....but I don't know if ANY kind of dysplasia will go away on it's own. When they first do a papsmear, and the results come back "abnormal" - they might wait a while and see if your body was just doing something weird and may change but from what I was told is that dysplasia means your cells are starting to CHANGE. And as you know - it progresses. If you want, I'm sure you could get a 2nd opinion from another doctor, or like you said - ask your doctor some more questions. I'm sure they've had a TON of patients before you that have been scared and have questions and they should give you all the information you want to know!
I went for my annual pap every year as a good girl should and back in April it came back as moderate-severe dysplasia. This was considered pre-cancerous so I actually had to go to the hospital, be put under, and have a cone biopsy of my cervix which is where they basically cut a chunk of it out instead of just freezing or lasering to make sure they got all the bad cells out. Obviously I was out for the the procedure but afterwards they just told me to take Ibuprofen or something but even after getting a moderate chunk of my cervix cut out, I was in barely any pain at all!
Even if cyro is moderately painful, as others have said - it's VERY temporary and it's worth doing the procedure rather than risking cervical cancer.
dysplasia
I went for my annual pap every year as a good girl should and back in April it came back as moderate-severe dysplasia. This was considered pre-cancerous so I actually had to go to the hospital, be put under, and have a cone biopsy of my cervix which is where they basically cut a chunk of it out instead of just freezing or lasering to make sure they got all the bad cells out. Obviously I was out for the the procedure but afterwards they just told me to take Ibuprofen or something but even after getting a moderate chunk of my cervix cut out, I was in barely any pain at all!
Even if cyro is moderately painful, as others have said - it's VERY temporary and it's worth doing the procedure rather than risking cervical cancer.
Good luck!