Jumping Jacks have proven an effective treatment for this disease!
There is no cure for murder. Far off in the future there may be a cure for death, but there will never be a cure for murder.
There is no treatment or "cure" for HPV but young healthy individuals will often throw off the virus within two years. There is no sure way to tell when you are "cured", so there is a possibility you can still spread the virus.
Probably not unless we get a remake in the far, far off future.
It's to create immunity for your antibody to fight off future HPV infections, type 6, 11, 16, and 18. These HPV types are responsible for 90% of genital warts and cervical cancer cases. You must finish the HPV shots before getting infected. If you were infected before you take the vaccine, it won't be effective as your antibody has tried to fight off the infection naturally (so you will have to wait until it succeeded). It's, however, still effective to fight the remaining of HPV strains that you haven't been exposed to. That's why everyone recommend the vaccine to be taken by younger people, because usually they haven't had any sexual exposure yet.
Yes their is a cure ha ha i send you off -_-
No they can not.
A vast majority of sexual HPV infections can be fought off by the body's immune system, however, some strains last a lifetime and the warts must be removed.
cut if off du
Take off your tie.
Cut off your foot.
If means that we would be better off if we could guess the future as easily as we understand the past.
There is no treatment or cure for HPV. But there are ways to treat the health problems caused by HPV in men.Genital warts can be treated with medicine, removed (surgery), or frozen off. Some of these treatments involve a visit to the doctor. Others can be done at home by the patient himself. No one treatment is better than another. But warts often come back within a few months after treatment-so several treatments may be needed. Treating genital warts may not necessarily lower a man's chances of passing HPV on to his sex partner. If warts are not treated, they may go away on their own, stay the same, or grow (in size or number). They will not turn into cancer.Cancers of the penis, anus, and oropharynx can be treated with surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Often, two or more of these treatments are used together. Patients should decide with their doctors which treatments are best for them.