Kann es sein, dass ich HPV habe?
Die Frage ist mir sehr unangenehm.
Ich bin noch 14 und hatte mit 8 oder 9 sexuellen Kontakt zu einem anderen Mädchen. Somit ist das jetzt schon 6/7 Jahre her. Ich war sehr naiv und habe das alles mitgemacht, als sie meinte, dass sie sonst nichtmehr mit mir befreundet ist.
Die Impfung hatte und habe ich noch nicht.
Wir hatten Oral und Genital Verkehr…
Ich denke, dass sie missbraucht wurde, dar sie sowas gesagt und gemacht hat.
Anderen sexuellen Kontakt mit jemanden hatte ich seitdem nichtmehr.
Ich habe jetzt an meinen inneren Schamlippen wie so kleine Bläschen und etwas weiter unten haut die wie Wildfleisch aussieht.
Ich habe echt Angst, dass ich diese Viren habe.
Meine Mutter hatte Gebärmutterhalskrebs, vielleicht konnnten die Viren ja auch durch die Geburt übertragen werden?
Ich gehe bald das erste Mal zum Frauenarzt, aber habe Angst.
Ich weiß auch nicht, was ich mir hierraus erhoffe.
Most importantly, you’ll talk about the topic with your female doctor. You shouldn’t be afraid either. On the one hand, your doctor or doctor is the right contact person for such topics. And on the other hand, you can be sure not to be alone with the subject.
Beforehand, you should know that every person can be infected by skin and mucous membrane contacts with other people. Many HPV types are transferred to normal skin contact, such as the widespread pathogens of harmless skin warnings. The genital HPV types associated with cancer are usually linked to intercourse. Oralsex can also transfer the viruses.
With every intimate skin contact, it is possible to fit, even in intensive, intimate kissing and petting – even in oral sex
In rare cases, transmission to non-sexual means is possible, such as transfer from mother to child during birth
Contrary to this, it does not seem possible to plug in without mucosa contact: The viruses do not pass into the blood, saliva, breast milk and also not directly into sperm. Normal kissing, blood donation or breastfeeding of a child thus pose no risk, according to today’s knowledge.
In the case of an existing HPV infection, vaccination can be protected from a disease with further HPV types with which one is not yet infected and which are contained in the respective vaccine. However, vaccination has no therapeutic effect on the existing infection. The vaccination can protect against a new disease after the healing of the existing infection.
Everything is possible, nothing is excluded. Who knows what the other girl had caught up.
You should just talk to your female doctor openly about it and let all the doubts be cleared, just so you’re calmed.
It can also be that you’re just afraid and are misinterpreting all natural things. Although “bubs” are always a sign of illness.
If you have HPV, nobody can tell you here. Call your female doctor and ask for a next appointment due to the symptom you described.
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This is actually not a thing of impossibility, although unusually late – usually it starts after weeks or months.
Relax – that can be something like that. Your gynecologist will give you safety in the form of a diagnosis and treatment.