Surgery for HPV will not affect your period. Take a pregnancy test if you're at risk for pregnancy, and contact your health care provider for adavice.
Yes, your body will typically clear high-risk HPV on its own. There is no treatment to make the infection go away faster. There are treatments for any cellular abnormalities caused by high-risk HPV.
Yes it can, the stress on your body can throw your cycle all out of whack!
yes ever way yes you do
I Think If Ear Surgery Goes Wrong It Could Make You Deaf...
HPV infection in newborns is treated by surgically removing the warts. If the warts obstruct breathing passages, frequent laser surgery is required. Interferon may be used to reduce the likelihood of recurrence.
Stress can alter a menstrual cycle. Surgery exerts physiological stress on the body. Therefore, surgery can indeed alter the dates of menstruation.
generally yes
our hormones are in a bunch and you dont want to mess with us when we r on our periods
No. Cervical cancer is caused by HPV, which is a sexually transmitted virus. Yearly Pap tests can almost always prevent HPV from progressing to cervical cancer. Amenorrhoea is simply the absence of menstrual periods, which can have many underlying reasons.
Yes. Any surgery can cause your periods to stop because of the stress it causes your body. If you miss 2 in a row, go and see your doctor. Or, if you have a check-up post-surgery, mention to whoever is doing the check-up that you didn't get your period
HPV is not in your blood.
You can not get HPV from centipedes.