First, "virginity" is not a medical concept. Cervical cancer screening can't determine if you've had sex before. If you have a positive HPV test, then it may be obvious that you've probably had sex.
EXTREMELY unlikely.
When a marker is used for cancer screening or diagnosis, the physician must confirm a positive test result by using imaging studies, tissue biopsies, and other procedures.
For a cancer screening sigmoidoscopy, an abnormal result involves one or more noncancerous or precancerous polyps or tumors. Patients showing polyps have an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer in the future.
Yes, it is possible to have HPV on a cervical cancer screening even if previous results were negative. the virus may have been detectable at one time and not at another, or you could have picked up a new infection.
They will do more than one test to absolutly make sure, and you would get the treatment as soon as possible.
In a screening test, maybe. The tests they do to confirm a positive result on the screening would rule this out, though, so you can probably stop worrying (unless you were hoping the answer would be yes, in which case you can worry a lot).
As of 2015, HPV probes are not normally done as screening tests. They may be used as supplementary tests in women with an ASCUS pap result, or as part of routine screening for cervical cancer in women over 30. They may also be used as a follow-up test in women with cervical dysplasia. In the coming years, HPV tests will probably be used as initial screening for cervical cancer.
A number of things can cause a false positive drug screen. A screening test is generally inexpensive to run. Tests for specific compounds are generally more expensive. As a result, more people will get a false positive on a screening test than will get a positive on the more specific test. Still, it will cost a lot less money to run an inexpensive test and then an expensive test.
Zanaflex, or better known as Tizanidine, has not been documented to cause false positive in screening tests for drug abuse. Hence if a positive result is registered for the psychoactive drug benzodiazepines, it is likely due to other medications taken by the user that are creating the false positive.
A pap smear is a screening test for cancer and precancerous changes of the cervix. An abnormal test result points out the need for additional testing.
Amniocentesis and CVS, the definitive tests for Trisomy 21 (or Down Syndrome), are expensive and not without risk. The Integrated test is a screening test, that divides the population into those at higher risk, and those at lower risk. Usually, from about 2 to 4% of women having the Integrated test will screen positive. All this means is that they are at a higher risk than was understood prior to the test. By identifying a smaller group of women at higher risk, the costs and risks associated with invasive testing can be restricted to those most likely to be carrying a Down Syndrome fetus. However, the Integrated test is a screen and is not diagnostic; all that can be said about a woman who screens positive is that her risk is higher. Most women who screen positive have normal pregnancies; only a small number actually have Downs fetuses. Each screening program has its own screening cutoff; the risk at which a woman is deemed to be 'screen positive', so the percentage that actually screen positive (the IPR - Initial Positive Rate) and the OAPR (Odds of being Affected given a Positive Result) vary from program to program. Any woman with a positive result can ask for this information as part of her decision making around further testing.