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I am not sure whose website you are referring to because I also have my own website while writing for Empowher. I am the author of Any Mother's Daughter - One Woman's Lifelong Struggle with HPV which is endorsed by Harald zur Hausen, MD who discovered that HPV was responsible for cervical cancer. He also received the Nobel Prize in medicine for this discovery. He has written the foreword for my book as well and recommends it not only for patients but practicing physicians as well.
The site is : thehpvsupportnetwork.org
I am considered an expert in HPV and am also giving the first ever patient presentation at this years International Papillomavirus Conference in Berlin Germany. I am an RN and have dealt with HPV for 25 years surviving two invasive cancers and HPV involvement of the cervix, vagina, vulva and anus. Had this question been directed to me I would have answered much sooner. I stumbled upon this quite by accident. You can get information on LEEP on my site as well as other procedures. These can be accessed from the home page.
Unfortunately it seems that you have been given or read some incorrect information. HPV is not passed back and forth like a ping pong ball. Since you never get rid of it (it only goes dormant and can recur at any later point in time) passing it back and forth doesn't happen as once you've transmitted it to your partner or visa versa you will both have the same stranis for life. Use of OC has been shown to be somewhat of a risk factor but that's in women who have used them for over ten years and even then it is not a significant risk risk factor. Yes you can get HPV in the mouth from oral sex, so can yor partner. Recent research has shown a significant increase in oral HPV cancers in men and if this continues at the current rate, the cases of oral cancer in men will exceed the cases or cervical cancer in women. A better job needs to be done in educating men regarding not only their risk from the virus but also their responsibility in transmission and in getting vaccinated. Unless you have single genotype tests run for both 16 and 18 and they come back positive then the vaccine will be of no use to you unless you are concerned about or want protection against gential warts. If your doctor runs the 16/18 combination probe, a positive test could mean you have both or just one so the vaccine is still advisable to protect against one you may not tyet have. In the future, please write me directly so I can answer your question in a more timely manner.

September 9, 2011 - 6:26pm

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