Can the HPV virus be excreted from the body in patients with condyloma acuminatum?

  Clinically, many patients with condyloma acuminata are concerned about whether the virus can be cleared out of the body after they are infected with HPV. The answer to this question is yes, HPV will eventually be cleared.  The HPV virus in the process of infection of the human body, generally only invade the superficial skin mucous membrane cells, even the skin dermis rarely enter, and not into the bloodstream. Since the virus is only in the epidermal cells and does not enter the bloodstream, it cannot activate the body’s resistance cells against the disease for a while, which is often referred to as the immune response system, so the virus often escapes the attack of the immune system in the human body for a while. The actual fact is that you can find a lot of people who are not able to get a good deal on a lot of things.  The actual virus that causes warts does not enter the bloodstream, hpv does not exist in the bloodstream, so the treatment is usually external. The actual fact is that you can find a lot of people who are not able to get a good deal on a lot of things. Many patients have a positive blood test for HPV, but this is a positive antibody, which means that the body has produced the appropriate antibodies against this foreign invasive virus, rather than a positive virus in the blood. Usually 90% of patients who are completely cured will have their immune system activated within two years to gradually eliminate the remaining HPV, just like the process of the human body overcoming the flu virus, which ultimately relies on the body’s own immunity and is never the result of medication.  Patients with recurrent HPV infections that do not heal over a long period of time are rare clinically speaking. Usually, these patients have a particularly low immune function, or are combined with other diseases that cause immune deficiency, such as diabetes, hepatitis B, or AIDS. In these patients, there is a long and complicated struggle between the virus and the immune system, but the immune system is usually able to win in the end.  The probability of HPV developing into cancer is generally very low. For women, they only need to pay attention to regular annual gynecological checkups for cancer screening to effectively prevent cervical cancer from occurring. In addition, compared to women who need years or decades to develop cancer from HPV, it usually does not take that long for the immune system to clear the virus, so it is not dangerous for most people, and there is no possibility of cancer.  This group of patients who have been infected with HPV but do not have any symptoms should not be too nervous. Although infected with the virus, they do not eventually develop the disease, which means that their own immune function is still relatively good. Over time, their own immune system will eventually respond to the virus and gradually clear it out of the body, although it may take a long time to do so, despite the absence of external stimuli to effectively activate the immune response.  As a result, patients infected with HPV, whether symptomatic or not, are not to be feared. Because HPV can eventually be cleared.