Get Abnormal Pap Smear Treatment Online
An abnormal Pap smear result can feel alarming, but it does not always mean cancer. Doctronic connects you with a licensed physician who can review your results, explain what they mean, and guide your next steps, all from home.
What Is Abnormal Pap Smear?
An abnormal Pap smear is a cervical screening finding marked by cellular changes on the cervix, ranging from mild inflammation to low- or high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions or atypical glandular cells. It can indicate an HPV infection, a cervical cell abnormality, or rarely an early precancerous change that warrants follow-up. With the right evaluation and support, most abnormal results are manageable and many resolve on their own with close monitoring.
- Most abnormal Pap smears are caused by HPV and do not indicate cancer
- Get personalized guidance from doctor-trained AI
- Explore treatment and prescription options
Is Online Abnormal Pap Smear Treatment Right for You?
Doctronic can help if you have received an abnormal Pap smear result and need guidance on what to do next. Whether your result showed ASCUS, LSIL, HSIL, or atypical glandular cells, a physician can help you understand your report and coordinate appropriate follow-up testing or referrals.
Gynecologic and cervical health history matters when evaluating an abnormal result. Factors such as prior HPV diagnosis, smoking, immunosuppression, and personal or family history of cervical dysplasia all inform how a physician will assess and manage your situation.
- Received an abnormal Pap smear result (ASCUS, LSIL, HSIL, or atypical cells)
- Get personalized guidance from AI and clinicians
- Explore treatment and prescription refill options
- Access care from home, often the same day
Medications We Prescribe for Abnormal Pap Smear
Gardasil 9
HPV Vaccine 9-Valent
The 9-valent HPV vaccine helps prevent the high-risk HPV strains most commonly linked to cervical dysplasia and may be recommended for eligible patients who have not completed the series.
AvailableFlagyl
Metronidazole
Metronidazole is prescribed when bacterial vaginosis or trichomoniasis is identified as a contributing cause of cervical inflammation seen on a Pap smear.
AvailableDiflucan
Fluconazole
Fluconazole treats vaginal candidiasis, which can cause inflammatory changes on a Pap smear and may need to be addressed before a repeat smear is performed.
AvailableVibramycin
Doxycycline 100mg
Doxycycline is used to treat chlamydial cervicitis or other susceptible infections that can produce cervical inflammation and abnormal Pap findings.
AvailableHow Abnormal Pap Smear Treatment Works at Doctronic
Chat With The #1 AI Doctor
Doctronic answers your health questions with personalized medical insights and helps our doctors create a better treatment plan for you.
Meet With a Licensed Doctor For Treatment
Book a $39 telehealth appointment (or copay) within 30 minutes. Our doctors create personalized treatment plans with prescriptions when needed.
Pick Up Your Prescription
Our doctors prescribe non-controlled medications in all 50 states and send prescriptions to your pharmacy for same-day pickup.
What a Doctronic consultation looks like
Free to start, no account needed. Here's how a real Abnormal Pap Smear consultation unfolds.
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$39 doctor visit · All 50 statesPricing that won't make you sick
Chat for free, see an online doctor for $39/visit, or refill a prescription online for as low as $0
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Available in all 50 states + DC
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Insurance accepted
- 24/7 medical care Free
- Specialist referrals Free
- Lifelong health record Free
- Unlimited questions Free
- Prescription refills Starting as low as $0
- Video visit with real doctors $39/visit
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Frequently asked questions
An abnormal Pap smear means that some cervical cells looked different than normal under the microscope. This does not automatically mean cancer. Results range from minor changes like ASCUS (atypical cells of undetermined significance) to more significant findings like HSIL (high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion). Many abnormal results are caused by HPV infections that the body clears on its own.
ASCUS means atypical cells were found but the cause is unclear. LSIL (low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion) usually reflects mild cell changes often associated with an active HPV infection. HSIL (high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion) indicates more significant cell changes that require closer follow-up, such as colposcopy, because they carry a higher risk of progressing to cervical cancer if untreated.
Next steps depend on the specific result and your age. Common follow-up options include an HPV co-test, a repeat Pap smear in 1 to 3 years, or a colposcopy, which is an in-office procedure where a doctor closely examines the cervix. A physician can review your result and recommend the most appropriate path for you.
Yes. Bacterial vaginosis, trichomoniasis, chlamydia, and yeast infections can all cause cervical inflammation that shows up as abnormal cells on a Pap smear. Treating the underlying infection and then repeating the smear often resolves the abnormal finding.
Not necessarily, but HPV is the most common cause of abnormal Pap results. High-risk HPV strains, particularly types 16 and 18, are responsible for the majority of cervical dysplasia and cervical cancers. An HPV co-test can be done alongside or after your Pap smear to clarify whether HPV is present.
In many cases, yes. The HPV vaccine can still provide protection against strains you have not yet been exposed to. Eligibility depends on your age and vaccination history. A physician can advise whether the vaccine is appropriate for you given your current situation.
Doctronic uses an AI-powered evaluation to gather detailed information about your symptoms, history, and test results. A licensed physician then reviews that information, makes a clinical assessment, and creates a personalized treatment or guidance plan. The entire process is designed to be fast, thorough, and convenient.
Yes. Doctronic works exclusively with licensed physicians, and all care plans are doctor-reviewed and audited for quality. The platform is HIPAA-compliant, so your health information is kept private and secure. Doctronic is available to adults 18 and older in any U.S. state.
Top Conditions We Can Help With
People turn to Doctronic and our licensed medical team for support with all types of conditions.