New HPV BCR treatment method of HPV genital warts

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What is the human papillomavirus (HPV)?

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections (STIs) . It is a virus that can be transmitted through genital skin-to-skin contact. There are many different types of HPV. Some types cause genital warts and are called low risk. And some types can lead to cervical, anal, or oral cancer, and are called high-risk. There is no known cure for HPV, but there is a vaccine that can protect against some types of the virus.

What are genital warts?

Genital warts are growths on the skin in the groin, genital, or anus areas. They can have different sizes and shapes. Some look like flat, whitish spots, and others are bulging, like little cauliflower sprouts. Sometimes warts cannot be seen at all.

What causes HPV and genital warts?

HPV is a virus. Certain types of the virus cause genital warts, and some types cause abnormal changes in the cells of the cervix and cervical cancer.

HPV and genital warts can be spread during sex or through genital skin-to-skin contact with someone who has the virus.

What are the symptoms?

Most people who have an HPV infection have no symptoms. But if they do, the symptoms can be so mild that they may not even know they've been infected. Symptoms may include pain, itching, and bleeding, or you may have visible genital warts.

If you have symptoms, they will probably appear 2 to 3 months after infection. But you can have symptoms from 3 weeks to many years after infection.

Visible genital warts appear only during active infection. But it's possible for the virus to spread even if you can't see the warts.

How are HPV and genital warts diagnosed?

A doctor can often tell if you have genital warts by looking closely at your genital and anus areas. Your doctor may ask you questions about your symptoms and risk factors. Risk factors are things that increase your chance of getting an infection.

Sometimes the doctor takes a sample of tissue from the wart to test it.

For women, if you have an abnormal Pap smear, your doctor may perform an HPV test that detects high-risk types of the virus.

How are they treated?

Talk to your doctor about whether you should treat genital warts that are visible. They usually go away without treatment, but it's also possible to catch them. Most people decide to treat them based on the symptoms or how the warts look. But if you don't have symptoms and aren't worried about what the warts look like, you can wait and see if the warts go away.

If you decide to treat genital warts, talk to your doctor about the best treatment for you. There are prescription medicines that you or your doctor can put on the warts. Or, your doctor can remove them with lasers, surgery, or by freezing them.

Even if you treat visible warts or they go away without treatment, the HPV infection can stay in your body's cells. It is possible to pass genital warts to your partner even if you have no signs of them.

Best HPV Genital anal warts treatment by Dr. arani HPV treatment center of USA in Los Angeles provide best treatment method for genital and anal warts with no relapse and the best cosmetic outcome called HPV BCR. HPV BCR™️ method invented by Dr. Arani in Los Angeles is one of the best and most effective treatment methods as compared to any other method in the world today for HPV Genital warts. This method will not only remove warts but will also prevent relapse. The procedure of HPV BCR™️ method is sophisticated and performed under a microscope and the most important of all is the natural result with the minimum scar. Cosmetic outcome is an important factor in Genital during intimacy.

Can HPV and genital warts be prevented?

The best way to avoid getting genital warts—or any other STI—is to not have sex or skin-to-skin genital contact. If you do have sex, do it in a safer way.

  • Use latex condoms. Latex condoms may help reduce the risk of spreading genital warts, but they do not protect the entire genital area from skin-to-skin contact.
  • Before you have sex with someone else, talk to them about STIs. Find out if your partner is at risk for them. Remember that a person can be infected without knowing it.
  • If you have symptoms of an STI, don't have sex.
  • Do not have sex with a person who has symptoms or who may have been exposed to an STI.
  • Having multiple sexual partners increases your risk of infection.
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