No. If you have not had HPV and, you cannot pass along.
You can't pass on HPV to your baby born by cesarean section. Typically, c-section isn't recommended based solely on a history of HPV. Talk with your prenatal care provider for advice specific to your situation.
Once you have HPV it does not go away. Therefore, if you have been diagnosed, you have it. You can pass it on to another person, but "passing it back" would not make sense, since you already have it.
Years or decades.
Yes, you can spread HPV through genital contact, even without sexual intercourse. There is a vaccination available now, if you do not already have HPV, that can prevent it. Please see the related link below.
HPV is passed on through genital contact-most often during vaginal and anal sex. HPV may also be passed on during oral sex. Since HPV usually causes no symptoms, most men and women can get HPV-and pass it on-without realizing it. People can have HPV even if years have passed since they had sex. Even men with only one lifetime sex partner can get HPV.
HPV is passed on through genital contact-most often during vaginal and anal sex. HPV may also be passed on during oral sex. Since HPV usually causes no symptoms, most men and women can get HPV-and pass it on-without realizing it. People can have HPV even if years have passed since they had sex. Even men with only one lifetime sex partner can get HPV.
No you can not be a carrier of HPV without having it yourself. A "carrier" is a common language term for someone who has infection and can infect others, but who has no symptoms of the infection. You can't pass an infectious disease like HPV unless you yourself are infected.
Cervical cancer is not contagious. However the virus, HPV, is sexually transmitted. There is a strong association between HPV infection and cervical cancer.
HPV exists in the urethra of the male. He has no symptoms if he has it. He can pass it to a woman through vaginal intercourse. Very simply put, HPV is a penis-vagina related infection. It is not a finger related infection. That is not the way it's transferred.AS ALWAYS THOUGH-- to prevent concerns about whether a guy is carrying HPV, *insist* he wear a condom!
Yes you can still pass it on to your partner if you have unprotected sex. A pap smear can't tell you if you do or don't have HPV. A pap smear only looks for damage to the cells of the cervix caused by high-risk HPV. For instance, people with genital warts can have normal Pap smears.
You can not get HPV from centipedes.