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I know that it is usally transferred through sexual contact and contact with genitals but what about sheets and towels? If a person wipes their area with a towel and then you use the towel are you at risk? Are you at risk if you use the same sheets or sleep in the same bed? What about if a person touches their area then touches you, can you get it? What if a person has a open wound or a closed healing wound and you touch it? Is it transferred? What about kissing, open mouth and kissing on the cheek? What about hugs?

2006-08-02 09:39:00 · 12 answers · asked by Lana M. 2 in Health Diseases & Conditions STDs

12 answers

HPV is only transmitted through direct skin to skin contact and by sex. You can get it if you were to touch someones warts and then touch yourself.

You CAN NOT get it from towels, sheets, a toilet, shower, hugging, kissing (unless the have warts in their mouth which is really rare), sharing a bed, hot tub, pool, etc. I have had HPV for over 5 years. I shared a bathroom for about 5 years with my two younger brothers and they NEVER got the virus from me. It's just not spread like that.

Also, HPV (Human Papilloma Virus) and herpes are NOT the same virus. They are completely different and have nothing to do with each other. Every day I am amazed about how many people on this site confuse the two!

2006-08-02 14:13:46 · answer #1 · answered by Alli 7 · 1 0

1

2016-12-25 02:40:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

People shouldn't answer questions they don't know the answers to! Firstly, HPV is not Herpes, and the person who stated the example for it, shouldn't have spoken! You can contract HPV via sexual intercourse with a person who has HPV. There are contradicting studies on weither or not condoms help or not. Because condoms don't cover the entire area. For you though, you will not get HPV from sleeping in the same bad as someone who has it. Sheets, towels, anything, no, you can't. If a person touches themselves where they have warts, and then touches your hand for example, no you can't get it. Your hand is not a sexual organ. HPV shows up in the genital area. Oral HPV is an issue, but is rare. As for wounds, I have no idea if you're talking about touching a cut on their arm or what not. If you are, absolutely not. HPV is not blood bound. If someone has oral HPV, I wouldn't reccomend kissing them, you can contract it that way. But like I said, oral hpv is very rare. Hugs, of course you won't contract it that way. HPV likes warm and damp spots (genital area, mouth)..... I wouldn't worry if I were you. Impossible to catch this without sex, and yes, oral sex included of course. They are one in the same! Also, someone who has HPV, with visable warts should go to do the doctor to get treated. There is no cure for HPV, but there is treatment for the warts themselves, also, not everyone who has HPV has warts. Abnormal cells on a womans cervix that can be found through a pap smear is usually how those kinds are found. So you're not always gonna be able to tell just by looking down there if you've got HPV or not.

Hope that helped! :)

I just came back to check on other answers, and saw that someone posted Yoshi's site 2 comments behind me. Great site, she and others are very informative! :)

2006-08-02 13:09:37 · answer #3 · answered by Kass 3 · 0 0

I don't know much about HPV, but I do know I wouldn't want to use a towel behind someone else.

Check the internet about HPV it will tell do's and don'ts.

2006-08-02 09:45:43 · answer #4 · answered by Shay~Shay 3 · 0 0

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2016-05-01 20:13:58 · answer #5 · answered by tifany 3 · 0 0

They do say it is suggested that you not share towels with an infected person, but it is doubtful that you are in any risk in sleeping in there bed or anything, but towels I would be cautious with, because I'm sure they dry that area also, and doctors do say to just avoid that, because you never know when someone is in the stage of being able to spread it. As far as touching the area and then touching you, yes you are at risk, it's simple for them also, they can actually spread it to other parts of their own body by touching themselves and then touching themselves elsewhere on their body, so likewise the same could happen with you. As for the wound question, if you are referring to one of their actual wounds (as in one of their herpes sores), yes again you are at risk, you can never be real sure when the person is able to spread. A study was done on an 18 year old female and it showed that she was more likely to spread the herpes virus when she had no sores, no symptoms, nothing that would make you believe she had herpes. I wouldn't be to concerned with hugging that isn't something to sexual. As for kissing, if they have herpes simplex 1 then yes you could contract that herpes (but rest assured believe it or not most adults have that form of herpes, it is just the everyday cold sore believe it or not, most adults have it and don't know it, because they never get cold sores). You could also contract it if they have herpes simplex 2 of the mouth (which is genital herpes just of the mouth) it is very rare that someone will have simplex 2 of the mouth but it is possible. Good Luck, and don't be overly paranoid, but do be safe!

2006-08-02 09:48:50 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no you can't get HPV through towels nor sleeping on the same bed. The virus can't live like that, it needs a host to keep it alive. You can get infected though through open wounds and such. About kissing and such I can't tell you. Look it up on the net.

2006-08-02 09:45:14 · answer #7 · answered by Natasha B 4 · 0 0

HPV can be transferred on items such as you are describing. Warts are transferred on surfaces all of the time, that is how you get plantar warts on your feet. However, it is less likely to happen compared to direct contact with the warts themselves.

2006-08-02 09:45:15 · answer #8 · answered by PreviouslyChap 6 · 0 0

A sexually transmitted disease (STD), also known as sexually transmitted infection (STI) or venereal disease (VD), is an illness that has a significant probability of transmission between humans or animals by means of sexual contact, including vaginal intercourse, oral sex, and anal sex. While in the past, these illnesses have mostly been referred to as STDs or VD, in recent years the term sexually transmitted infection (STI) has been preferred, as it has a broader range of meaning; a person may be infected, and may potentially infect others, without showing signs of disease. Some STIs can also be transmitted via use of an IV drug needle after its use by an infected person, as well as through childbirth or breastfeeding. Sexually transmitted infections have been well known for hundreds of years. Until the 1990s, STDs were commonly known as venereal diseases : Veneris is the Latin genitive form of the name Venus, the Roman goddess of love. Social disease was another euphemism. Public health officials originally introduced the term sexually transmitted infection, which clinicians are increasingly using alongside the term sexually transmitted disease in order to distinguish it from the former. According to the Ethiopian Aids Resource Center FAQ, "Sometimes the terms STI and STD are used interchangeably. This can be confusing and not always accurate, so it helps first to understand the difference between infection and disease. Infection simply means that a germ — virus, bacteria, or parasite — that can cause disease or sickness is present inside a person’s body. An infected person does not necessarily have any symptoms or signs that the virus or bacteria is actually hurting his or her body; they do not necessarily feel sick. A disease means that the infection is actually causing the infected person to feel sick, or to notice something is wrong. For this reason, the term STI — which refers to infection with any germ that can cause an STD, even if the infected person has no symptoms — is a much broader term than STD."The distinction being made, however, is closer to that between a colonization and an infection, rather than between an infection and a disease. Specifically, the term STD refers only to infections that are causing symptoms. Because most of the time people do not know that they are infected with an STD until they start showing symptoms of disease, most people use the term STD, even though the term STI is also appropriate in many cases. Moreover, the term sexually transmissible disease is sometimes used since it is less restrictive in consideration of other factors or means of transmission. For instance, meningitis is transmissible by means of sexual contact but is not labeled as an STI because sexual contact is not the primary vector for the pathogens that cause meningitis. This discrepancy is addressed by the probability of infection by means other than sexual contact. In general, an STI is an infection that has a negligible probability of transmission by means other than sexual contact, but has a realistic means of transmission by sexual contact (more sophisticated means — blood transfusion, sharing of hypodermic needles —are not taken into account). Thus, one may presume that, if a person is infected with an STI, e.g., chlamydia, gonorrhea, genital herpes, it was transmitted to him/her by means of sexual contact.

2016-03-16 12:46:28 · answer #9 · answered by Marie 4 · 0 0

Go to Yahoo Health for the best answer that way you'll know for sure.

2006-08-02 10:03:45 · answer #10 · answered by tracy c 1 · 0 0

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