Common symptoms of HPV infection include warts on the surface of the skin and genital warts. 1. Warts on the surface of the skin: most of them are papular, protruding on the surface of the skin, and can be found on the hands, feet, face and neck, manifesting as common warts, plantar warts, flat warts, filiform warts, and some of them are accompanied by itchiness, tenderness, cracks, and hemorrhages. 2. Genital warts: also known as condyloma acuminatum, the typical symptom is the genitals around the cluster of wart-like cumbersome organisms, the texture of the softer, with contact bleeding. 3. If the human papilloma virus infection is in the incubation period and eventually eliminated by autoimmunity, there are no obvious clinical symptoms. Long-term high-risk HPV infections can lead to malignant tumors and affect the quality of life of patients if left untreated. It is recommended that people with these symptoms go to the hospital immediately to receive regular treatment.