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My wife found out that she has a strain of HPV, and we were having unprotected sex before she found out. now our sex life has died and its becoming a problem with our relationship because i want the physical part, but for her it hurts to much to have intercourse with me does the pain have something to do with HPV? She also refuses to see a doctor cause they say shes fine every time she goes in to see someone about the pain.

2007-01-05 05:28:21 · 3 answers · asked by Rick P 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions STDs

3 answers

Have her go see different doctors...HPV can become serious and needs to be taken care of. Even if the pain doesn't have to do with HPV, she's still in pain and the doctors should be able to help her or attempt to help her. Try having her see a specialist or something. HPV doesn't have to do with unprotected sex, though - so it never had anything to do with your body and never will.

Some of it may be mental - she may be scared, she may be afraid to make the problem worse or create another problem. If you BOTH go to a good doctor together and can sit down and have a question and answer session, I bet it will help a lot.

2007-01-05 05:35:58 · answer #1 · answered by melissa 2 · 1 0

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2015-09-24 20:40:03 · answer #2 · answered by Demi 1 · 0 0

HPV (HUMAN PAPILLOMA VIRUS) SHOULD BE TREATED

What are genital warts?

Genital warts are skin growths in the groin, genital, or anal areas. They are considered a sexually transmitted disease (STD) because they are caused by a virus that can be spread by sexual contact.

Genital warts occur in women, men, and children.

In women, the virus that causes genital warts (human papillomavirus, or HPV) can infect the cervix, vagina, vulva, urethra, and the groin or anal areas. HPV can cause abnormal changes in cells of the cervix. Women who are infected with certain types of HPV are more likely than other women to have an abnormal Pap test. The types of HPV that cause visible warts usually are not the same types that cause abnormal cervical cell changes.
In men, HPV can infect the penis, scrotum, urethra, groin, or anal area.
In children, HPV can infect the genital area. A child can get genital warts in several ways. Any child with genital warts needs to be evaluated by a health professional to determine the cause and to assess for possible sexual abuse.
HPV infection can cause cell changes that increase the risk of anal or rectal cancer.

What causes genital warts?

Genital warts are caused by infection with the human papillomavirus (HPV). Of the many types of HPV, types 6 and 11 produce visible genital warts. Usually, they eventually disappear without treatment. Other HPV types, such as 16 and 18, usually do not produce visible genital warts. However, they are associated with precancerous and cancerous changes to the cervix.
THE USE OF LATEX CONDOMS WAS PREVENT TRANSFER OF HPV TO YOUR MATE.

2007-01-05 05:42:28 · answer #3 · answered by Dr. Albert, DDS, (USA) 7 · 1 0

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