Infection with HPV is not a condition that is treated in males and females. On the other hand, people with HPV-related disease can get treatment. These diseases include genital warts, for which a person can use at-home prescription creams or in-office treatment with freezing or liquid treatment. The other disease caused by HPV is dysplasia (abnormal cells) on the cervix or anus.
Males are tested for HPV just like females. The test is a blood test.
HPV can cause anal, penile, and head and neck cancers in males.
Both males and females can carry and transmit HPV.
Gardasil doesn't treat HPV or cancer - it is only a vaccine that will help prevent you from transmitting a few of the strains of HPV that are known to cause cervical cancer.
Most cervical cancer is caused by damage due to HPV. If the woman is still shedding HPV on the cervix, a man could get that strain of high-risk HPV.
Genital HPV is the most common viral STD. Occurs in both men and women. There are > 40 HPV types that effect the genital area of males and females. Hpv types can also infect the mouth and throat through oral sex. Since Genital HPV is a viral STD it can not be cured.
Yes, there have been documented cases of anal, penile, and head and neck cancers in men due to HPV.
There is no treatment for HPV, the infection would usual go away within a year. A proper diet for HPV is to take in lots of essential viamins and eat a lot watermelons.
No, there's a specific medicine for it, better go to an MD or ER
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. Antibiotics cannot treat viral infections such as HPV, herpes and HIV.
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.
The risks are extremely high, as are the risks with any type of new medication or vaccine. Two years ago a friend of mine gave her daughters the shot. Soon after, her 12-year-old started losing the feeling in her limbs. She was rushed to the ER and soon after admitted to the Peds ICU and placed on a ventilator. She was diagnosed with Guillain-Barr. Fortunately for her, she lived. The HPV vaccine has caused a number of deaths in the last couple of years, numerous cases of Guillain-Barre, and is known to not treat all causes of HPV.