yes they can but the virus is still in your body so you must try your best to keep your immune system in its best shape. According to cdc.gov and dr. hunter h. handsfield answer on medhelp as well as wikipedia, most HPV infections will be cleared up eventually by our own immune system.
Based on DNA PCR tests (that aren't available commercially, only for scientific journal purposes) most people who had HPV will have a negative test 2 years afterward. When i say most, they are 90% though, so the 10% will need 3-5 years or even more. Several people, like 1% or less, can't cure their HPV even after 10 years. Usually this is the type of people who gets Cervical cancer from specific HPV strains (but keep in mind cervical cancer HPV strain and genital wart HPV strain aren't the same)
So what you can do is to treat the genital wart every time they recur but one day they will stop recurring. If you have been 6-8 months wart-free then you will be no longer contagious.
They can go away with treatment; but the virus is always in the body and can come back at any time.
in some people with high immune system they do, most people have to get them surgically removed.
yeah they either get better, worse or stay the same. giving up smoking can help them go away and just doing stuff to make your immune system get better. all treatment does is make the visible ones go away and then its up to your body to make sure they dont come back
They come and go, however, it's a chronic STD.
The warts can go away, but the virus remains in the body.
Sometimes genital warts do disappear spontaneously.
i think that's herpes
Not usually. Once a person contracts the HPV virus, the person usually has it for life. Genital warts are treated by freezing them or with chemical creams. The virus can be transmitted to others even when you do not show outward signs. Warn any prospective partners before engaging in any sexual conduct.
Generally speaking, you can get to a point where you no longer have visible signs of genital warts, but the virus can lay dormant in your body forever. It is unknown whether the virus is completely eliminated or reduced to undetectable levels. The dormant virus can become reactivated when the immune response against it is compromised (ie during chemotherapy, HIV/AIDS). Most people do not realize this, but the virus is the same virus that causes simple warts on your fingers, etc. Human Papilloma virus can occur anywhere on your body. Some of the strains of HPV can persist throughout life without a person ever having an outward expression of having warts leaving them unknowingly infected.
Genital warts are a highly contagious sexually-transmitted disease that can affect both men and women. Fortunately, they can be treated, and they can also be prevented, but once you have the virus that causes them, some sources say that yes, the symptoms can come back again. The best thing to do is consult your doctor, who can examine you and then provide treatment options.
Yes, sometimes they just disappear on their own, especially ones that popped up during a pregnancy. Others seem to stick around stubbornly no matter what treatments are applied to them.
Genital warts typically do not come and go multiple times. They can go away on their own.
Genital warts typically do not return. If you get a new infection, you may have genital warts again.
Yes they can.
No, finger warts are not caused by the same subtype of HPV that causes genital warts.
No, only for genital warts like Giardasil.
Genital warts are usually flat, papular, or pedunculated growths on the genital mucosa. Diagnosis of genital warts is made by visual inspection and may be confirmed by biopsy, although biopsy is needed only under certain circumstances. No data support the use of HPV nucleic acid tests in the routine diagnosis or management of visible genital warts.
It is estimated that 1% of sexually active people between the ages of 18 and 45 have genital warts; however, studies indicate that as many as 40% of sexually active adults may carry the virus that causes genital warts.
The reality is that if you have genital warts, then you will need to have them removed by a doctor. Sorry....there simply aren't any home remedies or do it yourself methods that will get rid of genital warts. There are a lot of websites that would love to have you believe that there is an outright cure for warts of any kind, genital or otherwise. The truth is that once you have warts, you will always have them....what these companies are banking on is the fact that most warts will disappear on their own usually within a couple weeks.
You can be reinfected with genital warts in the future. HPV vaccination can lower the risk.
Yes they are; HPV is the virus that causes genital warts.
No it is not.
HPV or genital warts is often cauliflower shaped.
genital warts
Genital warts typically go away on their own. Treatments are available to get rid of them faster.
Yes women with HPV give men genital warts.
No, finger warts are not caused by the same subtype of HPV that causes genital warts.
Genital warts don't run in the family; you must come into contact with the virus to be infected.
No, only for genital warts like Giardasil.
no they can not.
Genital Warts