(800) 506-3565
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #5700
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS

    It’s a fact that infections and disease can be transferred through unprotected sex. If a sexually active promiscuous person continually engages in unprotected sex the probability of eventually infecting themselves or a sex partner is substantially increased. A male client may transfer the undetected and non-symptomatic HPV infection to a Courtesan or vice versa. A woman may be tested for HPV through a Pap Smear, but there is no valid test for a man.

    Human papillomavirus infection (HPV) is an unprotected sex cancer causing concern for men and women alike. HPV is passed on through genital contact most often during vaginal or anal sex. In addition, HPV may also be transmitted through oral sex. There are more than 40 types of HPV that can infect the genitals. Genital human papillomavirus, HPV, is the most common sexually transmitted infection, STI.

    HPV oncogenic strain infections can cause women’s cervical cancer virus (specifically cervix, vulva & vagina); HPV affects men causing throat cancer (oropharyngeal), anal cancer and penile cancer (testicles & penis) as well as genital warts and respiratory problems (papillomatosis, RRP) that don’t develop into cancers. Note: Other factors, notably tobacco and alcohol use, may also play a role assisting HPV to cause these cancers.

    In most cases HPV clears up through the body’s natural immunity system before it causes any health problems. Most people who become infected with HPV don’t know they have the virus, since there are usually no signs or symptoms. Also, HPV caused cancers are usually advanced and hard to treat due to the absence of these visible signs and symptoms including bleeding and pain.

    HPV is not related to herpes or HIV (the virus that causes AIDS). HPV is a different virus from HIV, and causes specific health problems. HPV does not live in the blood cells, but rather lives on the skin. Also, whereas HIV can lead to AIDS, genital HPV can lead to nononcogenic genital warts or certain types of genital, anal and throat cancers.

    HPV currently infects approximately 79 million Americans, and about 14 million people become newly infected each year. HPV is so common that nearly all sexually-active men and women who practice unprotected sex will acquire at least one type of HPV during their lifetimes even if both partners are totally monogamous. However, engaging in unprotected sex with multiple partners astronomically increases the chances of contracting the HPV infection. Fortunately for young people there are now preventive HPV vaccines available for males and females under age 26.

    HUMAN PAPILLOMA VIRUS CAUSES

    The cause of HPV lesions is known to arise from the spreading and increasing of infected basal kertinocytes. The actual infection occurs when basal cells from the host are contaminated by a virus through a non-intact epithelial barrier. Examples of this would be skin abrasions or during sexual intercourse.

    The HPV can easily spread from one host to another. Since it can survive at low temperature for many months without a host, contamination becomes very convenient. A person infected with plantar warts and would walk around barefoot may also infect other people that will come into physical contact (skin to skin) with the floor.

    There is no valid test to determine if a man has become infected with the Human Papillomavirus through unprotected intercourse or cunnilingus oral sex, but there exists a three injection series vaccine for about $500; however, it takes years and oftentimes decades for HPV to develop into cancer. If a man lives long enough he’ll probably develop prostate cancer and Alzheimer’s disease too. The fact is that most women enjoy cunnilingus and I enjoy performing it, so I’ll take my chances picking and choosing partners. In addition, there is much less risk if a man and woman are not promiscuous sexual partners. I had a friend who had been engaging in oral sex with his wife, and later discovered she had HPV through a Pap smear. 30 years later he developed throat cancer, so it normally doesn’t occur quickly. I don’t know how she was infected, but HPV can be passed from mother to child in rare cases.

    References
    http://std.about.com/od/viraldiseases/a/hpvoverview.htm

    http://www.cdc.gov/STD/HPV/STDFact-HPV.htm

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_papillomavirus

    http://www.healthscout.com/ency/1/384/main.html

    http://oralcancerfoundation.org/facts/humanpapillomavirus.htm

    http://www.medicalook.com/Skin_diseases/Human_papilloma_virus.html

    http://www.webmd.com/sexual-conditions/hpv-genital-warts/hpv-virus-men

    #7258
    rewith85man
    Participant

    This sounds unpleasant to me although it is very important.

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Skip to toolbar