It may be due to cervical mucus plugs, or it may be due to leucorrhea during ovulation. During ovulation, the leucorrhea will be transparent and stringy. If the leucorrhea is dry, it will become jelly-like.
This condition may also be caused by a cervical mucus plug. The cervix can secrete mucus and form a mucus plug in the cervical canal. Mucus plugs can prevent upward bacterial infection. During examination, you can see that 2/3 of the cervical mucus plugs are free of bacteria, indicating that the cervical mucus plugs have a very good protective effect. However, cervical mucus plugs will be exchanged. Over time, the old mucus plugs will fall off and form new mucus plugs. Therefore, this jelly-like gel tissue is the mucus plug.
Leucorrhoea is female vaginal discharge, which is a mixture of vaginal mucosal exudates, cervical canal and endometrial gland secretions. Its formation is related to the action of estrogen. Under normal circumstances, the quality and quantity of leucorrhea change with the menstrual cycle. After menstruation, the leucorrhea will be small in amount, white in color, and pasty.
In the middle of menstruation, when the ovaries are about to ovulate, due to the strong secretion of cervical glands, leucorrhea increases, which is transparent, slightly sticky, and egg white-like. 2 to 3 days after ovulation, the leucorrhea becomes turbid, thick and thin. Before and after menstruation, due to pelvic congestion, vaginal mucosal exudates increase, and leucorrhea often increases.