Treatment options can not remove the virus from the body. Warts disappear on their own without treatment in about two years, but no treatment with medications that accelerate extinction. And surgical removal is recommended, especially when you have cancer risk.
There is still no treatment to eliminate HPV infection, and the only possible treatment is to remove lesions caused by virus. However, removing the warts does not necessarily stop spreading virus and genital warts frequently recur.
A treatment that can be used by patients is podofilox cream or gel (Condylox). Treatment may be continued for a period of 3-4 weeks or until the lesions disappear. When treating genital warts Aldara Cream is used which contains the active ingredient called imiquimod (a substance that stimulates the production of cytokines, chemicals that strengthen immune response). Alternative methods include cryotherapy (freezing the wart with liquid nitrogen requires) or laser surgery.
Precancerous lesions (cervical dysplasia)
Women who experience the transformation of precancerous lesions of uterine cervix in severe or moderate need of treatment to ensure that cancer does not appear. In this case, treatment consists of removing or destroying the affected tissue.
Risk Prevention to contact other genital infections is greater for those who have HPV in the body. Women should be very cautious because certain types of viruses predispose to cancer of the cervix. To track these dangerous types there is a special test that applies to women known as HPV infection.
Preventing infection with HPV vaccine can be made. Another method of prevention is abstinence. But a person can avoid sexual contacts contact other HPV types, such as those that cause warts on other body areas. About 30 types are transmitted sexually from the 100. Other sources of infection are reaching an infected area or pool water.