Can warts be ruled out if you are asymptomatic 14 weeks after high-risk behavior?

Being asymptomatic for 14 weeks after high-risk behavior does not rule out condyloma acuminatum, which usually has an incubation period of one to eight months.
The incubation period for warts is usually 1 to 8 months. Having high-risk sex with a person with warts or a carrier infected with the HPV virus can lead to infection with the HPV virus, but it takes time between infection with the HPV virus and the appearance of warts, and this is the incubation period for warts.
The incubation period can be generally from 1 to 8 months, the onset of early may be shorter than 1 month, the onset of late may also be longer than 8 months, so if there are no symptoms 14 weeks after infection with the HPV virus, it is not certain that the warts will not appear in the future.
Once warts appear, you need to go to the hospital dermatologic and venereal disease department in time to avoid delay.