All HPV vaccines are recombinant. They are not live vaccines.
AnswerGardasil is the immunization for HPV. It is administered in the deltoid muscle of the upper arm (right below the shoulder)
No. This is not possible. The Gardasil vaccine contains recombinant proteins from HPV to provoke an immune response. There are no live viruses, attenuated viruses or even dead viruses in the vaccine. The viral DNA is not present in any form.
Yes, health officials in the US can and have recommended HPV vaccine for males and females age 9 to 26. This immunization can reduce the risk of genital warts and certain types of genital or head and neck cancers.
B.C.G Vaccine
You can get the HPV vaccine even after being ill. As long as you have no fever on the day of immunization, there's no reason to delay the shot.
The external viral proteins of the HPV vaccine.
No. It is a preventative.
Attenuated whole-agent vaccine
vaccine
There is no evidence that HPV vaccine causes cervical cancer. Because the vaccine doesn't contain live virus, it can't cause HPV disease.
Live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) is a type of influenza vaccine in the form of a nasal spray that used to be recommended to prevent influenza.
Yes, you can start the birth control pill regardless of whether you've had the HPV immunization recently, in the past, or not at all.