How to treat positive HPV in gynecology

HPV refers to the human papillomavirus. When infected with this virus, if there are no symptoms, treatment is usually not needed and the body’s immunity can usually clear it up, and most patients are able to clear themselves. If the virus has caused some lesions, appropriate treatment is needed, usually surgery, and in a few cases, medication. Surgical treatment can usually be done with laser or electrocoagulation, or if the warts are large, they can be removed. The most important factor is self-resistance. If you are infected with high-risk HPV and the body does not remove it, it will cause continuous infection of high-risk HPV. At this time, HPV can integrate with human DNA, leading to uncontrolled cell proliferation and cellular hyperplasia, which can occur at a certain level, i.e. cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. When precancerous lesions occur, cervical cancer screening can be performed, and after screening, minor surgery can be performed, for example, if the lesion is in the cervix, and HPV can be removed at the same time, and the probability of HPV being removed is usually about 70%. The HPV virus can be divided into high-risk and low-risk types. low-risk types can cause genital warts such as condyloma acuminata. if the body does not clear itself of the HPV virus, warts similar to spindly growths may appear. the growths can be small, such as the size of a sesame seed, or relatively large, reaching 1-2 cm, and can be single or many. They can be single or many, and can grow on the external genitalia or in the vagina or cervix.