should not blood on the sweb but infection is compound then blood possible
That is a common occurence.
Blood on the swab is not unusual during a pap smear and has no clinical significance.
After any pap exam you can bleed. It's completely normal. Talk to your doctor about bleeding or spotting after a pap smear, they will explain it to you.
yes culture swab not impotent other instruments can be used
The physician palpates the cervix, inserts a speculum and gently scrapes the patient's cervix with a small spatula and brush, collecting cells that are spread on a glass slide. A cotton swab may be taken.
An anucleated squamos cell is a cell that does not have a nucleus. In a pap smear it could be dead skin cells that got caught in the swab.
That's called a 'swab'.
no brush your teeth alot and gargle with mouthwash
The doctor then uses a tiny brush, or a cotton-tipped swab and a small spatula to wipe loose cells off the cervix and to scrape them from the inside of the cervix
Such swab tests are used to check for gonorrhea and chlamydia, or bacterial vaginitis, which is a bacterial infection resulting in inflammation of the vagina.
antisepsis
You can have a blood test done, but believe it or not the technology is gearing more towards the swab and the swab is as accurate. One of the reasons is the fact that sometimes people might have a blood transfusion or bone marrow transplant which can jeorpadize the test result.
The metal brush is called a "brush". The cotton brush is referred to as a "swab". There are also combination cleaning units consisting of both the metal brush and a long lenght swab called "barrel scrubbers". There are also "slotted ends" for cleaning rods that hold "patches," or small pieces of cloth saturated in cleaning solution. Any and all of these can be found at any sporting goods store. Hoppe's is a long standing manufacturer of said accessories. http://www.hoppes.com