Genital Warts Treatments
The most common time for a person to contract genital warts is between the ages of 17 and 33 years of age. If you do have genital warts, you must know that it isn’t the end of your world. You will need to take further measures to ensure you do not spread your genital warts. You need to act quickly and treat genital warts before they have a chance to spread on your body and become larger and more painful. If you do nothing, your risk of endangering yourself further increases so it is best to seek treatment as soon as possible.
Genital warts are high contagious, therefore, you can give your partner genital warts even if you contacted them just once. Since genital warts are so highly contagious it is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases in the world and the number of people who contract genital warts is growing by the year.
If you do have genital warts and currently using some form of treatment, you will need protection to help prevent it from spreading to your partner. Wearing condoms may decrease you chancing of preventing genital warts slightly but not totally. Why? Genital warts can appear around the genital area so even though you are protecting one area you are still exposing your partner to the area around the genitals.
You can try surgical procedures but these are only performed in the most serious of cases. Surgical options are effective but very costly and painful in most cases. Hopefully, you will treat your genital warts before they reach the surgical stage. If not, then you might be suffering with the high cost of surgery for a very long time.
There are numerous medications that have been known to help treat genital warts such as Condylox' (generic podofilox), Efudex (generic 5-flourouracil), Alferon N' injection (generic interferon alpha-n3) and Aldara (generic imiquimod). If you act swiftly, you should be able to keep your genital warts under wraps so much that you won’t even be able to tell you have them. Even if you can’t see them, it is important you tell your next partner you do have them. That can be a very awkward conversation but they should appreciate your honesty. This will also show that you are a trustworthy person and will not keep secrets from them in the future (perhaps).
Genital warts are high contagious, therefore, you can give your partner genital warts even if you contacted them just once. Since genital warts are so highly contagious it is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases in the world and the number of people who contract genital warts is growing by the year.
If you do have genital warts and currently using some form of treatment, you will need protection to help prevent it from spreading to your partner. Wearing condoms may decrease you chancing of preventing genital warts slightly but not totally. Why? Genital warts can appear around the genital area so even though you are protecting one area you are still exposing your partner to the area around the genitals.
You can try surgical procedures but these are only performed in the most serious of cases. Surgical options are effective but very costly and painful in most cases. Hopefully, you will treat your genital warts before they reach the surgical stage. If not, then you might be suffering with the high cost of surgery for a very long time.
There are numerous medications that have been known to help treat genital warts such as Condylox' (generic podofilox), Efudex (generic 5-flourouracil), Alferon N' injection (generic interferon alpha-n3) and Aldara (generic imiquimod). If you act swiftly, you should be able to keep your genital warts under wraps so much that you won’t even be able to tell you have them. Even if you can’t see them, it is important you tell your next partner you do have them. That can be a very awkward conversation but they should appreciate your honesty. This will also show that you are a trustworthy person and will not keep secrets from them in the future (perhaps).