26 year old male. Just yesterday I had a sexual encounter with a new partner (graphic description ahead).
I gave her a little bit of oral (kind of) before I noticed a whitish bump on her labia. It wasn't red or itchy or painful so I doubt it was herpes. To be honest, it looked a lot like bumps I get on my penis all the time that my doctor says are just ingrown hairs or cysts. But it also could have been a genital wart.
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I didn’t touch it directly with my mouth, but I used my mouth on her through her underwear, and I briefly put my mouth on her bare vulva on the other side from where the bump was. I then put the inside of her underwear in my mouth. If it was indeed a wart, could I still have gotten an infection in my mouth?
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I never touched her genitals with mine, but right after touching her I put my hand in this vaseline-like substance (might have been cocoa butter or coconut oil or something), and then about 30 minutes later she put her hand in the same substance and proceeded to touch my penis and testicles with it. Could the virus have survived for that long in some such moist substance?
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Would getting an HPV vaccine do any good now that I’ve already been exposed (but the infection may not have taken hold yet)?
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I’ve read that you can do things to fight off an HPV infection early on. What kinds of things should I be doing?
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Can you spread genital warts during that early stage when you’ve been exposed but haven’t had your first outbreak yet?
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What kind of test or examination for genital warts should I tell her to ask her doctor about, to make sure they catch it if it is indeed a wart?
Thank you for any answers you can give. As you can tell, I’m pretty worried.
having a hpv vaccine once exposed wont help also it may not even b a wart she needs to have her doctor take a look at it for a definate diagnosis even if u had come into contact with the wart dosnt mean that ur going to get them yourself
she can be tested for hpv a doctor can usually detect a wart by looking at it her cervix will also need to b checked because warts can grow there also and can cause cerival cancer
Genital warts can be spread during vaginal or anal sex, and by sharing sex toys. But you don’t need to have penetrative sex to pass the infection on because HPV is spread by skin-to-skin contact.
HPV is most likely to be transmitted to others when warts are present, although it is still possible to pass the virus on before the warts have developed and after they have disappeared.
question: i visited my doctor and asked him to look at a rising that i noticed back in june it never grew or anything just was curious about it. he felt it looked at very closely and he stated it was a mole after pressing for more info and asking more question he stated he could put the tca acid on it and see if it would disappear,also once he placed it on there he stated it never turned white,and if it was a wart i wouldve been very uncomfortable because it would burn badly however it never burn or anything. when i got home i did notice a circler white area where the tca acid was placed and days later all the skin including the rising was completely gone. can you tell me what you think?
iv spoke to u already about this so has it gone now
ive had all series of the hpv shots ive obtain my adult shot record the other day. one when i was 8 years old,12 years old, and 20 years old
yes that and the skin around it
yes and the skin around it
well there you go then hapoy days its gone that will probably be the end of it now and it wont come back
when you say it what are you suggesting it is
i dont know i never saw a picture of it the acid can remove moles aswell as warts and benign skin tags so it could have been one of them