HPV infection
Overview
HPV infection is a viral infection. There are more than 100 types of human papillomavirus (HPV). Some types of HPV infection cause skin growths called warts and some types of HPV infection can cause cancer.
Most HPV infections don't lead to cancer. But some types of genital HPV can cause cancer of the lower part of the uterus that connects to the vagina, called the cervix. Other types of cancers have been linked to HPV infection. These include cancers of the anus, penis, vagina, vulva and back of the throat. Cancer at the back of the throat is called oropharyngeal cancer.
These infections are often passed through sex or through other skin-to-skin contact. Vaccines can help protect against the strains of HPV most likely to cause genital warts or cervical cancer.
Symptoms
Usually, the body's immune system defeats an HPV infection before it creates warts. Different types of HPV produce different warts, including:
Genital warts. Some appear flat. Others look like small cauliflower-like bumps or tiny stemlike bumps. In women, genital warts appear mostly on the vulva. But they also can occur near the anus, on the cervix or in the vagina.
In men, genital warts appear on the penis and scrotum or around the anus. Genital warts rarely cause discomfort or pain. But they might itch or feel tender.
Common warts. Common warts appear as rough, raised bumps. They usually occur on the hands and fingers. Most common warts are simply not attractive. But they also can be painful. And it's easy for them to get injured or bleed.
Plantar warts. Plantar warts are hard, grainy growths that usually appear on the heels or balls of the feet. These warts might cause discomfort.
Flat warts. Flat warts are flat-topped, slightly raised sores called lesions. They can appear anywhere on the body. But children usually get them on the face, men tend to get them in the beard area, and women tend to get them on the legs.
Causes
HPV infection occurs when the virus enters the body, usually through a cut or other damage to skin. The virus spreads mainly by skin-to-skin contact.
Genital HPV infections are contracted through having sex, anal sex and other skin-to-skin contact of the genitals. Some HPV infections spread through oral sex.
People who are pregnant and have an HPV infection with genital warts can give the infection to the baby. Rarely, the infection may cause a noncancerous growth in the baby's voice box, called the larynx.
Warts spread easily. This means that warts are contagious and can spread through direct contact with a wart. Warts also can spread by touching something that has touched a wart.
Risk factors
HPV infections are common. Risk factors for HPV infection include:
Number of sex partners. The more sex partners, the higher the risk of getting a genital HPV infection. Having sex with a partner who has had multiple sex partners also increases the risk.
Age. Common warts occur mostly in children. Genital warts occur most often in adolescents and young adults.
Weakened immune system. HIV/AIDS or certain medicines used after organ transplants can weaken immune systems. People who have weakened immune systems are at greater risk of HPV infections.
Damaged skin. Areas of skin that have been injured are more likely to develop common warts.
Personal contact. Touching someone's warts might increase the risk of HPV infection. So can touching surfaces that have been infected with HPV, such as public showers or swimming pools.
Complications
Oral and upper respiratory sores, called lesions. Some HPV infections cause lesions on the tongue, tonsils or soft palate, or within the larynx and nose.
Cancer. Certain strains of HPV can cause cervical cancer. These strains also might play a part in cancers of the genitals, anus, mouth and upper respiratory tract.
Diagnosis
A healthcare professional might be able to diagnose HPV infection by looking at the warts.
If genital warts don't show, one or more of the following tests can find them:
Vinegar, called acetic acid, solution test. A vinegar solution applied to HPV-infected genital areas turns them white. This may help flat lesions show up.
Pap smear. A sample of cells from the cervix or vagina go to a lab to look for changes that can lead to cancer.
DNA test. Testing cells from the cervix can identify the DNA of the types of HPV that are linked to genital cancers. It's recommended that women 30 and older have this test with a Pap test.
Treatment
Warts often go away without treatment, particularly in children. But there's no cure for the virus. So the warts can come back in the same place or other places.
Medicines
Medicines to get rid of warts usually go directly on the warts. These medicines might need to be used many times before the warts go away. Examples include:
Salicylic acid. Treatments without a prescription that contain salicylic acid work by removing layers of a wart a little at a time. For use on common warts, salicylic acid can irritate skin. Salicylic acid isn't for use on the face.
Imiquimod (Zyclara). This prescription cream might help the immune system fight HPV. Common side effects include swelling where the cream is applied.
Podofilox (Condylox). Another prescription applied to the skin, podofilox works by killing genital wart tissue. Podofilox may cause burning and itching where it's applied.
Trichloroacetic acid. This chemical treatment burns off warts on the palms, soles and genitals. It might cause irritation where it's applied.
Surgical and other procedures
If medicines don't work, one of these methods can remove warts:
Freezing with liquid nitrogen, called cryotherapy.
Burning with an electrical current, called electrocautery.
Surgical removal.
Laser surgery.
Treatment for HPV in the cervix
A procedure called a colposcopy can remove HPV from the cervix. A healthcare professional uses a tool, called a coloscope, to see the cervix and take tissue samples, called a biopsy, of areas that look atypical.
Precancerous lesions need to be removed. Options include freezing, called cryosurgery, and laser surgical removal. Another method called loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP) uses a thin looped wire charged with an electric current to remove a thin layer of a section of the cervix. And cold knife conization is a surgical procedure that removes a cone-shaped piece of the cervix.
Type of Doctor Department : Gynecologist

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