If someone with hepatitis has HPV, they can transmit it, just as someone without hepatitis can do. The two are unrelated.
It is not likely.
HPV infections rise sharply in the mid teens. Most HPV infections do not cause any symptoms so it is possible to be infected by HPV and not know about it.
Yes, you can have a kidney transplant even if you have genital warts or HPV. Immunomodulators may affect the course of HPV disease, but HPV doesn't prevent this option.
HPV is a virus. You can't develop it; it is transmitted by skin-to-skin contact. Usually HPV is contracted by having sexual intercourse and/or sexual contact with an infected partner.
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.
Marijuana poses no special risks to someone who got the HPV vaccine. The risks are the same as for those who have not been vaccinated.
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.
Yes. Cervical cancer usually comes from HPV an std that many, many, people have and is asymptomatic. It has nothing to do with having kids.
There is no commercially available test to tell someone they don't have HPV. An HPV test is sometimes done in conjunction with a Pap smear. This test looks for high-risk HPV subtypes on the cervix. It can't tell you that you don't have HPV. Most people contract HPV soon after becoming sexually active. If you are sexually active, you have probably been exposed to HPV. There is nothing special you need to do if you have HPV. You should consider getting the HPV vaccine, using condoms or abstaining from sex, and, if you're female, should get pap smears regularly as advised by your women's health care provider.
HPV, or Human Papillomavirus, comes in several different forms. You can get the simple, harmless form from shaking someone's hand (warts). However you cannot get the STD version of this disease simply from shaking someone's hand.
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.