HPV (human papillomavirus) is generally not discharged from the hand wound; mainly through sexual contact, as well as close contact, mother-to-child transmission, medical contact and other cross-infection.
1. Sexual contact: for example, HPV infection caused by warts, is a sexually transmitted disease, mainly through sexual intercourse with the patient caused by cross-pollination.
2. close contact: for example, HPV virus infection caused by flat warts, common warts, etc., may come into contact with the warts, resulting in cross-pollination; may also be contact with the patient’s contaminated supplies caused by the spread.
3. Mother-to-child transmission: Pregnant women with HPV virus in their bodies may pass through the birth canal during the delivery process and transmit the disease to their newborns.
4. Medical contact: for example, abnormal dental operations, as well as earrings, tattoos, improper protection during treatment and care may also cause transmission.
If you have high-risk contacts, you should go to the hospital in time to determine whether you are infected with the HPV virus, and follow the doctor’s instructions for treatment in case of abnormalities.