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Help Our Community Answer Your Questions Better By Including In Your Post: Gender, Have You Been Tested For An STD Yet?
Type Of STD Tests and Results? Any Medications To Control Your STD?
What does HPV mean for me as a man? I've read there is not even a test for men to find out if I have it and they only treat you if you have warts, which I do not.
Will I have HPV forever? If I have another partner in the future, will I pass it on to them? Is it something I need to disclose to future partners? Can you only pass it on if you have symptoms?
Everything I have read tells me not to worry too much, and that 70 to 80 % of the sexually active population has it, but it's hard not to freak out about a sexually transmitted disease, especially one I can't get a handle on.
so what does hpv mean for you? really nothing at this point for your own health. the types of hpv that are associated with cervical cell changes do not present with symptoms for males. Hard to even tell if this is hpv she got from you or a hpv infection she has had from a previous partner that is just now progressed to the point of causing her any obvious symptoms.
do the two of you use condoms?
have either of you had your gardasil shots?
Yes, she had her gardisil shot 2 years ago, but the doctor said she may have contracted it years ago, and the shot doesn't protect against all strains.
I know there are not any health problems for me to worry about right now, but I worry about being a lifetime carrier, and spreading the virus. I love my girlfriend, and I am not concerned about future partners, but I am a "what if" kind of person. I don't want to be spreading a disease around. Will it go away, will I always spread it? Does it only spread if symptoms are present.
I have a really hard time with the lack of knowledge and info on this virus. I have a tough time being told I may or may not have an STD, there is no test for me to even find out, I may or may not be a lifetime carrier, but hey, don't worry about it.
Sounds reassuring and all, but I don't know....have you read the thread on this site called "living with hpv"? People in there are saying they have had this virus and been asymptomatic for decades, but they still believe they have it.
Maybe I'm just pessimistic about the whole thing because I've had symptoms of this for over a year, which puts me in the apparently tiny percent that even gets symptoms at all, and the even tinier percent that can't clear the virus. (I'm a woman, btw, and I have lots of visible warts on my outer labia and vaginal opening but a normal pap and no other health problems. And obviously I'm bitter about it.)
Also I can't see how a condom would help much if this is so contagious my gyno said not to touch the warts myself or i'd spread it all over my genital region. There is still skin to skin contact even with condoms. Where is that 90% figure coming from? Are you only talking about the cervical stains?
As far as I can tell, you won't have this forever. But even the doctors I've talked to have different opinions on it, so I totally get what you're saying about the ambiguity of the information out there about HPV. The general feeling I get is that you can help your body defeat the virus by doing things to boost your immune system....quit smoking, take a multi-vitamin, eat healthy food, exercise. Most people can clear it up that way within two years. (That's according to my obgyn.)That's probably something you and your gf should do to beat this and reduce the risk of it developing into cervical cancer.
In the meantime you should start using condoms to reduce the risk of re-infecting each other. If she comes back with a normal pap at some point down the road, still use condoms because you might still be carrying it.
the stats come from several well done studies. Lots of hpv research has come out in the past 5 years thanks to the gardasil trials.
the 90% reduction in transmission study comes from a condom and hpv study published about 4 years ago if I recall. It covers all genital hpv infections, not just cervical hpv infections.
I also got the Gardasil shot before I was infected. It only protects 4 of the 100 strains so I think the way it is marketed is completely misleading. I personally think it was a waste of my money.
Did you ever learn any more info about your situation? I am in a similar situation where my gf found abnormal cells during a PAP.
Like you, aside from being concerned about her health, it is not clear in reading about HPV what the impact is on me as a man in terms of my chances of being a carrier and for how long. For example, does her having the abnormal cells now mean that she is currently actively infected by HPV or could it be a side effect of an infection she had (and got over) years ago and is no longer contagious herself?
Although they say 80% of the population has had it, it sounds like most do not get the 2 or 3 varieties that can cause cervical cancer. Does that mean that being a partner with somebody that had abnormal cells makes you a carrier of that type specifically and thus a bigger concern than the other types that most people get and get over without even noticing?
Is the type that is more likely to cause cancer one that is harder for the general population to get rid or will most men and women get over it within a year or two (and no longer be a carrier) and only people susceptible to it don't get over it.
I realize that there is very little health risk directly to men, but like you, my concern is being a carrier and specifically a carrier for the variety that has a higher chance of causing cervical cancer.
For those looking at using condoms to reduce their risk, female condoms (they've been improved since the old ones) cover more skin than male, so may be useful to reduce transmission even more. As an added benefit, they feel MUCH better for the man, and don't seem to make much difference in sensation for the woman
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