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I had precancerous cells and had 2 children following, both vaginal deliveries. I was never diagnosed with HPV, however, the ones that most frequently cause precancerous cells are invisible to the human eye so the Doc told me. Precancerous cells can also just grow on their own. It doesn't mean u have cancer or ever will develop cancer. All it means is the cell are unusual and they could stay that way forever but most Doc's play it safe and laser them out. Good luck to you.

2006-06-21 16:57:26 · answer #1 · answered by Yoshiko 3 · 2 0

This is just a total guess....but it sounds like you or someone you know had precancerous cells caused by HPV, and I'm guessing its the cervix, but I could be totally off!

I got cervical cancer when I was 17 years old from HPV. I had to have a small piece of my cervix cut off in whats called a Leep Procedure. The doctor said the only thing I might have trouble with having a baby in the future is having a premature baby. She said because the cervix is now a little shorter since they cut the layer of it off. Since it is shorter the baby's weight can cause it to dilate sooner causing a premature birth. She said I might have to be on bed rest the last half of my pregnancy.

This won't stop you from having children, you'll just have to be a little more careful. HPV can be past to a child through birth if you have genital warts (caused by HPV). Warts are passed by direct skin to skin contact. If you have genital warts at the time of delivery, they may suggest you do a C-section delivery.

2006-06-21 16:34:03 · answer #2 · answered by Alli 7 · 0 0

No, precancerous cells (PCC's)are not a cause for concern in future childbearing. If the cells are allowed to go untreated they can cause problems (from my experience the cells that you are referring to are located on the cervix and can turn into cancer years later). In my case, I've not had children yet (I'm 35) and still want to. I was assured by my dr. that this would affect my fertility. The PCC's that were detected via pap smear and verified via a 'cytoscopy' (both non-surgical procedures) were stage 2, and still benign and small in #. I had the option to either get them removed via laser - the prefered procedure because of the efficacy and lack of scar tissue left behind - or to just have a repeat pap in 4 months. (I opted for the latter.) Many times in otherwise normally healthy women, the cells can return to normal on their own. Precancerous cells are caused by HPV (remember that there are over 20 types and subtypes of HPV), but I am not sure about mother to child transmission. Your OB/GYN or midwife can more accurately answer that. I hope that this helps!

2006-06-21 15:41:52 · answer #3 · answered by fluffy_flea_bag 1 · 0 0

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2016-04-28 06:29:16 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

I am not sure about the first part of your question, but the answer to the second part is an unfortunate "yes." To prevent transmission, however, in most cases a doctor will perform a Cesarean section and the baby will be disease-free.

2006-06-21 15:26:14 · answer #5 · answered by Cat Loves Her Sabres 6 · 0 0

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