What to do if your vulva is infected with HPV type 53 positive

Vulvar infection with HPV53 positive, if it does not cause cervical, vaginal and reproductive tract lesions, can be temporarily observed without special treatment; if HPV53 positive caused vulvar, vaginal warts or pre-cancerous lesions or cervical cancer, can be into laser, surgery and other methods of treatment.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is very common nowadays, and is divided into high-risk and low-risk types. Infection with this virus firstly requires a cervical liquid-based thin-layer cytometry (TCT) examination, and the next step of treatment will be chosen according to the results of this examination.
If you are infected with HPV53 and your cervical TCT is negative, you can have a combined screening test in one year, which means you can have another HPV and cervical TCT test, and if the virus is negative, you can have another test in three to five years.
HPV53 infection causes cervical lesions, TCT examination is non-squamous epithelial cells or low-grade and high-grade lesions, it is recommended that direct colposcopy, take a cervical biopsy to do pathology, if the cervical biopsy suggests that there is no squamous intraepithelial lesion of the cervix, this case does not require further treatment, and one year after the re-examination.
If HPV53 positive caused vulvar, vaginal warts or precancerous lesions or cervical cancer, can be into the laser, surgery and other methods of treatment.
HPV infection is relatively common in women today, and the vast majority of them can turn negative within 24 months. Only a very small number of long-term persistent infections may cause cervical lesions.