No. Genital warts are caused by several strains of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). You would have to have HPV in order to develop genital warts.
However many HPV virus are very common and easily caught, and it is unusual to be tested for HPV unless you have symptoms.
Genital Warts occur from person to person by direct contact with wart tissue and indirectly by virus contamination through contaminated secretions or instruments are also a possible.
Genital warts don't run in the family; you must come into contact with the virus to be infected.
You can't get chlamydia from a genital scar. Chlamydia is spread by sexual contact with someone who's infected. You can get it from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
If you've never had sexual contact with anyone, then you can't get HPV. If you've ever had sexual contact with a person, you can get HPV, the genital warts kind.
Genital warts are caused by certain strains of the human papillomavirus (HPV), which is a virus, not a bacteria or a parasite. HPV is typically spread through sexual contact.
No, another persons mouth or genitals must touch yours to get genital warts. Genital warts usually come from herpes or HPV. you can get herpes in the mouth from kissing though, especially if the person you are kissing has herpes in the mouth.
Warts are caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV), which infects the top layer of skin. The virus triggers rapid cell growth, leading to the formation of a benign tumor on the skin. Warts are contagious and can spread through direct contact or by touching surfaces contaminated with the virus. Different strains of HPV can cause various types of warts, such as common warts, plantar warts, and genital warts.
There are 100 different kinds of hpv, 30 of which are sexually transmitted, 12 of which casue genital warts, and 15 of which can cause cervical cancer. Warts can be spread from any part of the body to any part of the body by skin contact. So, if you have a type of HPV that causes warts, and the warts on on your face, it you have genital contact you could spread that kind of HPV to the genetial area.
Yes they are; HPV is the virus that causes genital warts.
You can be reinfected with genital warts in the future. HPV vaccination can lower the risk.
No it is not.
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.