answer asap please!
Tags: After, Genital, Getting, Vaccine, Warts
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November 22nd, 2009 at 4:07 pm
Yes. The vaccine is a temporary immunity and like all vaccinations, contain lots of toxic garbage. How many people do you know that have ever gotten and HPV problem? It is rare. I suggest you go to the book store and buy the book: “The Sanctity of Human Blood” by Timothy O’Shea. This book is written by and documented by medical doctors and researchers that are concerned about what is happening to the vaccination craze that drug companies are pushing on people. Drug companies make about $1 billion dollars on each vaccine they produce and that is a lot of incentive to promote it and using everything from fear tactics to misinformation to push it on people. Why not build your immune system overall? After all, isn’t that what vaccinations are supposed to do? Doctors don’t know how to advise you on building your immune system and they are programed to give you drugs, vaccinations, and surgery to solve medical issues because they treat symptoms, not “root causes” of disease. They are about drugs, not health these days.
good luck
November 22nd, 2009 at 8:05 pm
Gardasil has NOT been proven to provide COMPLETE protection against persistent infection with other HPV types, some of which also can cause cervical cancer. Therefore, about 30% of cervical cancers and 10% of genital warts will NOT be prevented by the current vaccine. In addition, Gardasil does not prevent other STIs, nor does it treat HPV infection or cervical cancer. So, long story short, YES, you can still get genital warts after the vaccine. You should ALWAYS guard yourself against potential infection by using protective barriers…ANY community health person could tell you this, and I suggest you ask your BOARD CERTIFIED PHYSICIAN for such guidance.
November 22nd, 2009 at 10:25 pm
The vaccine prevents two low risk HPV types 6 and 11. These two HPV types are the cause of most genital warts.
They are other HPV types that could cause genital warts. Genital warts may show in a month or so but it may take years after initial exposure for the virus to show as a genital warts or as abnormal cell changes.
If you have had any sexual events even hand to genital play they you may have already acquire an HPV type. The vaccine prevents low risk HPV types 6 and 11 before exposure. From the Gardasil website: http://helpforgenitalwarts.com/genital-warts-pictures/" /> GARDASIL may not fully protect everyone, and does not prevent all types of cervical cancer, so it’s important to continue routine cervical cancer screenings. GARDASIL will not protect against diseases caused by other HPV types or against diseases not caused by HPV.
They are over 30 high and low risk HPV types and the vaccine only prevents 4 HPV types 6, 11, 16 and 18.
So yes you ‘might’ acquire visible genital warts after the vaccine….if you were exposed to HPV before you were vaccinated, if the vaccine did not work for you…or if they were of a more uncommon HPV type that might show as a genital wart.
I wish you well.
November 23rd, 2009 at 2:06 am
The HPV vaccine Gardasil protects against 4 strains of HPV: 6, 11, 16 and 18. These 4 strains account for about 90% of all genital warts cases and 70% of cervical cancer cases. Considering there are over 100 strains of genital HPV, this is some pretty darn good protection.
Gardasil had a really successful clinical trial. One of the best results I have seen, and I do a lot of research and read a lot of trials. It is *so* successful that I went out and got it for myself as soon as it was available to me. I have had no side effects. My paps are always normal. And I definitely have no warts.
Could you get genital warts after getting this vaccine? You could, but the chances would be incredibly tiny unless you were to biggest slut to ever walk the face of the earth. To get warts after being vaccinated would require you to pick up one of these more obscure wart strains. But even if you had that kind of HPV, you’d only have about a 1% of ever showing warts.
November 23rd, 2009 at 8:50 am
Yes
November 23rd, 2009 at 12:56 pm
i suppose u still can because the vaccine only protects against the types that cause cancer.