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Are
you here making
queries about genital warts because you
don’t know what they look like or maybe
feel like.
Genital warts are very much a common
issue and an embarrassing one too for many
sufferers. In medical terms this specific
condition is referred to as
“Condylomata
acuminata” or “venereal warts.” A proper
and usual explanation of the warts
is they are small fleshy growths, bumps
or skin changes in or on the genital or
anal region. However no matter whatever
you read or hear you should always have
your GP clarify any uncertainties you
have in relation to any health issue,
whether it is to do with the genitals or
not.
Because
venereal warts are a viral condition and not
one caused by bacteria, antibiotics will not
rid the warts. Not to panic as there are other
treatments that can do
this.

Can Genital Warts Be
Removed!
Do You Have Genital
Herpes?
Genital
Warts is a viral sexually transmitted infection
(STI) caused by the
human papilloma virus(HPV) which is usually passed
on during sexual intimacy.
Genital warts grow in the
moist warm tissues
of the genital region like the vulva, vagina,
and cervix in women, and in men, on the tip
and/or shaft of the penis. They can also
develop around the anus. If oral sex is
initiated, the outcome usually shows warts in
the mouth and the
throat.
The HPV virus that is
usually the cause of genital warts is not
curable but the warts are.
A popular
remedy for ridding genital warts is
cryotherapy. The warts are frozen using
liquid nitrogen. The amount of liquid
nitrogen used would depend on the size of
the warts.
Cryotherapy is commonly done
in the doctor's surgery. The recovery
period can vary-due to how many warts
are rid in the process, and provided
there were no setbacks when they were
getting done. Healing time generally
takes between 7 to 21 days. Minor
discomforts after treatment
includes
Irritation and slight pain, if
severe tell your
doctor
Swelling
Sores or blisters
forming
If
you have had cryotherapy
for external
genital warts, and experience any of
the symptoms below then call your doctor
as soon as because these are not good
symptoms.
-
Feeling
feverish
-
Persistent
bleeding
-
Foul
smelling or
yellowish
discharge
-
Prolonged
pain
You
have to be brave about this problem, not
in the sense of what treatments or other
etc, but more in lines if you are
embarrassed that you have genital warts.
You will be surprised at how common this
disease is. So you are not on your own in
your suffering. As with any condition
early treatment secures your health so as
to speak. Face up to your problem and
seek medical
attention.
Remember your GP is treating
genital warts on a wide scale and in huge
numbers, so this is nothing new to
him/her. You are just another case who
needs treatment, and this is how your
doctor sees this. Now go along to the
surgery or clinic and get yourself
examined and treated so you can get on
with other things in your life that you
may have put on hold because of your
genital warts
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