Plant Medicine Can Penetrate Deeply To Eradicate Wart Infections

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Genital warts are caused by human papilloma virus (HPV). Many individuals are unaware that they have HPV infection because certain types of HPV cause no visible signs or symptoms. Infection can occur in sexually active men and women of all ages, races, and social classes, and can affect both homosexual and heterosexual. Infants may acquire this infection from their mother during delivery.
The types of HPV that are linked to cervical cancer are not the types that usually cause genital warts. However a woman with genital warts, like any other sexually active woman, should get yearly Pap smears. The types of HPV that cause clinically inapparent or subclinical infection continue to be studied as possible risk factors for cervical cancer.
It is important that a pregnant woman notify her doctor or clinic if she or her partners has had genital warts. Because of hormonal changes during pregnancy, warts can bleed or grow in size and number, and may make delivery more difficult. A pregnant woman with genital warts blocking the birth canal will need to deliver her baby by cesarean-section.
Genital warts begin as small lumps often with an irregular cauliflower-like surface. The shape and color vary depending on their location. They appear on the sexual organs of men and women and can also appear on the buttocks. The first symptoms usually appear within two to three months after infection, but may occur anywhere between one to twenty months.
In women, the vulva and the perineum are most frequently affected, but warts also occur in the vagina, cervix, anus and rectum. In men, the glans, foreskin, thigh, and urethral opening are most commonly affected, followed by the shaft of the penis, scrotum, anus and rectum. Men may have small shiny spots called pearly papules on the glans which are normal and should not be confused with warts.
Direct skin-to-skin contact spreads the infection most easily. However, the virus is not transmitted via blood or body fluids. The most common means of transmission for genital HPV is direct contact between infected skin on the penis, scrotum, vagina, vulva, or anus and uninfected skin in the same areas of the partner's body. The virus targets the moist, usually pink or red tissue known as the mucous membranes, and the areas surrounding the genitals.
You can reduce your risk of getting genital warts by not having sex with anyone or by having sex only with one uninfected partner who has sex only with you. People who have many sexual partners are at higher risk of getting any of the sexually transmitted diseases including HPV. Latex condoms are recommended if you have sex with more than one partner, or if your partner has sex with someone else besides you.
Genital warts are diagnosed by their typical appearance. They may be raised or flat, single or multiple, small or large, or even cauliflower-like. One of the most widely used tools to diagnose genital warts in women is colposcopy, which uses a magnifying scope to look at the interior of the vagina. Colposcopy also enables the physician to see the skin much more closely.
Treatment for external warts is podophyllin or Imiquimod cream. Other treatments include freezing with liquid nitrogen, burning with electrocautery or laser surgery. If many warts are present, surgery may be necessary using local anesthetic. Plant medicine has a wide spectrum of action against HPV, is non toxic, and represents a perfectly safe and effective wart remover.
As the treatment is quickly absorbed into skin tissue without causing harmful side effects, it is ideal for eradicating wart infections. The lipophilic characteristic of the extracts in plant medicine allow them to penetrate deeply. They circulate through the skin and into the system. It not only has a direct virucidal effect against warts but provides total systemic support.
In comparison with other warts treatments, the mode of action of plant medicine as an anti-warts agent is particularly interesting not only in consideration of its ability to inactivate the extra cellular virus at concentration much lower than those in other treatments, but also for its ability to inhibit the cell-to-cell virus diffusion in infected cells, which makes this treatment unique and far superior to all others. To learn more, please go to http://www.naturespharma.org.


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http://www.naturespharma.org



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