Yes
Yes women with HPV give men genital warts.
A woman can contract HPV the first time she engages in intercourse. Once a female is sexually active, she should receive regular PAP smears. If the cells are abnormal, it could be HPV. It can occur and be treated at any age.
The vaccine is administered in three doses over a six-month period. Patients with HPV-positive throat cancer have a disease-free survival rate of 85-90.
Yes, a man can give a woman HPV and a woman can give a man HPV. To reduce the spread of HPV, males AND females can go to a clinic or their primary doctor and get the HPV vaccine in 3 different doses at 3 different times. If someone ALREADY has HPV, the HPV vaccine should still be taken because there are over 100 strains of HPV, and you may not have one of the strains that the vaccine prevents.
Male sperm can survive in the female reproductive tract for up to 5 days, while female sperm can survive for up to 3 days.
There is no commercially available test to tell someone they don't have HPV. An HPV test is sometimes done in conjunction with a Pap smear. This test looks for high-risk HPV subtypes on the cervix. It can't tell you that you don't have HPV. Most people contract HPV soon after becoming sexually active. If you are sexually active, you have probably been exposed to HPV. There is nothing special you need to do if you have HPV. You should consider getting the HPV vaccine, using condoms or abstaining from sex, and, if you're female, should get pap smears regularly as advised by your women's health care provider.
Male sperm typically survive in the female reproductive tract for up to 5 days, while female sperm can survive for up to 7 days.
HPV is now one of the most prevalent viruses affecting female genital health. Untreated HPV can cause cervical and uterine cancer, make a female sterile, and create stress and emotional upheaval in a woman's life because of the stress and fear associated with cancer. Many women can receive adequate treatment before HPV causes severe damage. But the only way to know if HPV is present is through regular gynecological exams. If a woman is diagnosed, she shouldn't ignore it because the virus will progress and cause health problems. Parents of girls debate about the new vaccine to protect girls against HPV. But it is the only defense against this rampant and widespread disease.
There are 2 ways to prevent HPV. One is to use safe sex methods. This means using condoms for men and especially female condoms. Also there is a vaccine available which protects against 2 of the worst causes of cancer.
HPV is not in your blood.
You can not get HPV from centipedes.
No, once you get HPV you have it forever. You get HPV from intercourse or other skin-to-skin contact. HPV has nothing to do with smoking.