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Thread: cervical cancer

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Olney, MD
    Posts
    3,063
    In general "cleared" means gone, not dormant.

    HPV is more easily passed on to another person when there are visible warts present and for at least three months afterwards.

    Clearing of virus is likely related to strain and to biology/genetics of the individual person. Apparently, if the infection clears there is little (researchers rarely like to say "no") risk of cervical cancer.

    Although most women will probably clear most HPV infections, with repeated exposure the odds of a nonclearing infection will increase. Since the link between cervical cancer and HPV infection is strong, and since the vaccination can provide immunity to most infections it will prevent a significant number of cervical cancer cases.

    "In 2006, an estimated 10,000 women in the United States will be diagnosed with this type of cancer and nearly 4,000 will die from it. Cervical cancer strikes nearly half a million women each year worldwide, claiming a quarter of a million lives."

    There's a lot of good info here (the source of that quote).

    BTW, I have a 10 yo daughter and will likely get her vaccinated at age 12.
    I'd rather be swimming...biking...running...and eating cheesecake...
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  2. #2
    Kitsune06 Guest
    Thanks MD.
    Even seeing the freaky factors (from 50% to 75% women will be infected with it at some point in their lives?!) I think I will pursue the vaccination when it's within my means to do so. I should probably actually be tested before I do so. I didn't have fun in college, but I've been with someone who had, and in multiple countries, and that's reason enough. That's the thing about being broke and also not a student- I haven't had an exam since '03. I really need to get a start on that instead of being a hypocrite and b*tching about people not watching themselves.
    Thanks to everyone who's posted on this thread. Things like this are hard for people to talk about, in general, but discussion is so important and so informative to not just people posting but also lurkers.
    real insight is often not appreciated enough.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    stratford upon avon,england
    Posts
    223
    well,had a smear test today!!!NICE????


    now,in the uk you see the dr for free,smear tests are free,prescriptions are £6.50 i think no matter what drug you have,and hospitals are all free-well,u can go private,but ive been lucky and the national health system has always been brill.


    so,to what extent do you lot have to pay for stuff?


    "the pill"is free but condoms arent unless you can be bothered to trek up the the GU clinic and sit in a room of people all lookingh slightly embarrassed!
    who is driving your bus?

  4. #4
    Kitsune06 Guest
    At Planned Parenthood it operates on a sliding scale, though they don't verify employment so I presume people lie about their income to pay less than they should. I don't even remember what it was last time I went; I was going for my Depo shots. I've been in since, but for different reasons and didn't get a real exam.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Chapel Hill, NC
    Posts
    75
    I am amazed at how much misinformation there is about HPV. I myself had never heard of it . . . until I was diagnosed with it a couple of years ago, after an abnormal pap. Luckily I go to a university medical center with extremely attentive women's health doctors and nurses, so my doctor explained a lot to me - unlike many other gynos here, it seems!

    That said, if you are over 40 or married, your doctor probably didn't bring it up because you aren't really at risk anymore. Relax!

    First, my doctor did say that *most* young women are infected with HPV at some time in their 20s, but in most people the virus clears by their late 20s without causing problems. (The 1 in 4 figure is for all women ages 14-59 - for women in their twenties the infection rate is estimated to be nearly 50%). One reason it is so prevalent is that the strains of HPV that can cause cervical cancer appear to not cause any ill effects in men. So of COURSE women get it by the droves - the men don't know they have it, and there's no reason for them ever to get tested (I'm not even sure if there is a test for men). Cervical cancer is a major killer of women in some less-developed countries, where women don't have much say in their sex lives AND don't have access to pap smears.

    Regular paps should reveal abnormalities caused by HPV with enough time to clear them up before they become cancerous. I had to have two colposcopies and a LEEP procedure to get rid of abnormal cells, but they seem to have done the job. My understanding is that if I go through several normal paps in a row, then the virus may be gone for good.

    My boyfriend has never made an issue of my HPV status - and it is clear I didn't get it from him (my parents were also cool about it). The shaming that goes on is ridiculous. These people who don't want girls to get the vaccine because it might cause them to be promiscuous make me crazy. I understand that you wish people would wait until marriage - but you really think CANCER is a just punishment? I do not believe that is what Jesus had in mind.

    Also I would like to clarify that the strains of HPV that cause warts and the strains that cause cancer are separate strains of the virus. Warts do not = cancer.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    In the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee
    Posts
    40

    Colpo anyone?

    Timing of this thread couldn't be better - I'm going in for a colpo on Tuesday after my pap came back "atypia" and the HPV was positive. I'm 42 and in a committed relationship, so the HPV had me a little freaked at first, but after reading a lot of good information, learned that it's no reflection of anyone's morals or character or whatever. The virus also can pass thru latex, so condoms are not a reliable preventive.

    Here's a very informative website you might want to check out -

    http://www.ashastd.org/hpv/hpv_overview.cfm

    Okay, climbing down off the soap box now...

    Question: I'm a little concerned about how long the colpo will keep me 'out of the saddle' - anybody out there had one that could advise? Thanks so much! I'd rather think about that than the possibility that I have cancer... though fortunately, 'atypia' is not usually a big cause for concern. Keep your fingers crossed, please!

    Amy

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    Quote Originally Posted by Cha Cha View Post
    Question: I'm a little concerned about how long the colpo will keep me 'out of the saddle' - anybody out there had one that could advise? Thanks so much! I'd rather think about that than the possibility that I have cancer... though fortunately, 'atypia' is not usually a big cause for concern. Keep your fingers crossed, please!
    Amy,

    Good luck for your colpo. I've had quite a few of those. I was not cycling at the time but I don't think it would have kept me out of the saddle more than one day. I distinctly remember that getting my cervix scratched made me feel like I feel on the first day of my periods, which entails lower back and right thigh pain. And sometimes some bleeding. That lasted no more than a day.

    It might be different for you but if it's properly done I don't think it should keep you out of the saddle for that long.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Alaska
    Posts
    2,201
    Quote Originally Posted by Cha Cha View Post
    Question: I'm a little concerned about how long the colpo will keep me 'out of the saddle' - anybody out there had one that could advise? Thanks so much! I'd rather think about that than the possibility that I have cancer... though fortunately, 'atypia' is not usually a big cause for concern. Keep your fingers crossed, please!
    fingers are crossed. i had one done about three years ago. the first couple of days i was quite sore. its not the most comfortable thing to have done. my doc told me to take some ibuprofens before i went it. i'm glad i did.

    i too wasn't biking at the time and don't know how long you maybe out. hopefully not to long.
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  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Posts
    407
    Quote Originally Posted by Cha Cha View Post
    The virus also can pass thru latex, so condoms are not a reliable preventive.
    It's not that it passes though latex (it doesn't), it's that latex doesn't cover all of your skin. It spreads though skin-to-skin contact.
    Just keep pedaling.

 

 

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