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Genital
Warts; Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) |
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I
am the Grandmother of all growth, all growing things, all life.
I am the grandmother of bacteria and viruses as well as plants
and animals, fish and insects. When you throb with life these
other lives live with you. When your life force ebbs, they live
on you, growing grotesque without the check of your immunity.
Do you feel proud of your sexuality my child? Your immune
system thrives on true pride; and fails when subjected to blame
and shame, guilt and mortification. Walk tall; smile often;
be flexible, let life fill you, and you will have little to
fear from most viruses you meet.
for women who exhibit the earliest signs of HPV
infection, the best prescription may be no treatment at all,
according to Karyn Herndon at Northwestern University Medical
School in Chicago. Three out of four women in the observation-only
group lost their flat warts - a finding that suggests that the
bodys immune system can drive the virus into a dormant
state.[1] Women treated with laser removal of cervical
warts were twice as likely as untreated women to have precancerous
and cancerous changes occur in the following years.
Having an HPV infection is like having the sniffles,
says Anna-Barbara Moscicki, MD. Its an infection
your body can usually handle
and get rid of.[2]
In a study of 600 sexually active women aged 13 to 21, half
became infected with HPV over a 10 year period; 70% of those
women did not develop lesions or warts at all, and only 10%
of those who did have lesions were diagnosed with cervical cancer.[3]
Many of the papilloma viruses are non-contagious, but some -
especially those that give rise to plantar warts and genital
warts (HPV) - are not only contagious, but widespread and stealthy.
They are resilient enough to live outside the body. Shed skin
cells containing the viruses can remain infectious for several
days in warm, moist places.[4] And symptomless people can pass
HPV to others. Some of the viruses that cause genital warts
are benign; others can give rise to deadly cancers.
Of the 20 types of HPV which colonize the genital area, four
are known to initiate cervical cancer, a usually slow-growing
cancer which is currently responsible for the deaths of more
women in Africa, Asia, and India (where Pap smears are not routine)
than any other cancer.[5] Several HPV are implicated in penile
and rectal cancer as well. HPV is the most common STD in the
USA and Europe, with more than six million new cases a year
in the USA.[6] At least 50%, and probably closer to 100% of
all non-vaccinated sexually-active people will be infected over
their lifetime. During a three-year study, 40% of a group of
female college students acquired HPV infections.[7] Fortunately,
only a small percentage of HPV infections generate cancer, and
we can do much to insure we arent in that small percent.
Once infected with human papilloma virus, you are infected for
life. There is no known cure and no medically-approved treatment.
The best strategy is to nourish the immune system.
Homeopathic Thuja is a ground remedy for the genitals,
and is especially indicated when there are genital warts.[8]
Higher dilutions, such as 30C, are best.
While there is no food that prevents or cures HPV infections,
the likelihood of warts or cancer is determined by the immune
system - which can be nourished and strengthened with whole
grains, well-cooked greens, roots, cabbage family plants, olive
oil, organic dairy products and meats, onions, garlic, seaweed,
mushrooms, and nourishing herbal infusions of astragalus, burdock,
and nettle.
St. Joans wort (Hypericum perforatum) is a natural antiviral.
One of its alkaloids, pseudo-hypericin, kills HIV. But ingesting
it in concentrated form causes hypersensitivity to sunlight,
making it useless as a drug. Fortunately, the tincture of the
fresh plant - even in large, frequent doses - counters viruses
without triggering sensitivity. Avoid capsules or teas; they
can cause sensitivity. When I feel the need to prevent a viral
infection, I use one dropperful of Hypericum tincture in a little
water three or four times a day for a few days. When I want
to treat viral infections, I use one or two dropperfuls in water
every hour or two until symptoms abate, and continue at a lower
dose until I no longer need it.
Lemon balm (Melissa officinalis) and hyssop (Hyssopus officinalis)
are mint family plants with antiviral constituents which are
especially effective as salves.
Celandine (Celadonium majus) juice is the most effective way
I know to remove external genital warts. It is safe, painless,
and easy to use if you live where evergreen celandine grows
- in Europe, in North America, from Nova Scotia to Georgia and
west to Missouri, throughout Europe, and in waste places in
temperate-zone cities. The fresh sap from leaf stalks or the
root works fastest, and best, but topical applications of tincture
are somewhat effective, too.
American mandrake (Podophyllum peltatum) is the acknowledged
queen of external genital wart destruction. This poisonous plant
is used in a concentrated form - Podophyllin - as a topical
treatment. Although plant-based, Podophyllin can cause severe
side-effects, including burns that scar, fatal reactions, and
birth defects or fetal death if used during pregnancy. To prevent
damage to healthy tissues, all skin except for the warts must
be thoroughly covered with petroleum jelly before it is applied,
and the Podophyllin must be wiped off before it penetrates too
deeply, usually within one to four hours. Weekly treatments
over six or more weeks are the norm. A less concentrated, and
thus safer form - Podofilox - is available by prescription for
use at home. (But trichloroacetic acid is safer, and celandine
is more fun.)
Eastern white cedar, Thuja occidentalis, is the tree of
life. Thuja is primarily a homeopathic remedy, but thuja
tincture or essential oil applied twice a day to genital warts
can burn them off.
Trichloroacetic acid is as effective as Podophyllin in removing
warts, but less likely to leave scars or provoke severe systemic
reactions, and is considered safe to use during pregnancy.[9]
It is applied in the doctors office, usually weekly for
six weeks.
Colposcopy is a close examination of the cervix with magnifying
binoculars after it has been bathed with acetic acid (vinegar),
which turns HPV-infected tissues bright white. You do not have
to agree to a biopsy if you agree to a colposcopy; testing for
HPV-DNA is better in many ways. If you do agree, biopsy forceps
will be used to chomp out pieces of cervical tissue
for microscopic examination by a pathologist.
Testing cervical cells for the presence of DNA from cancer-causing
HPV is just as effective as a biopsy of cervical tissue,
with less expense, according to researchers at Georgetown
University Medical Center in Washington, DC. Screening every
woman over 20 every two years with an HPV-DNA test would reduce
the number of cervical biopsies by 60%, they conclude.[10] A
woman who tests negative for HPV, as 45% of women will, does
not need a colposcopy. If the test if positive for HPV, theres
still only a 10-20% chance that she will require treatment.[11]
It is not known how many women who have had expensive
[and painful] laser surgery or
cryosurgery are informed
beforehand that the treatment is purely cosmetic and has a high
recurrence rate.[12]
Before you agree to any procedure, remember that removal of
infected tissue does not remove the virus, which remains ready
to recur when the immune system is at an ebb. Surgery doesnt
cure HPV, and because it is a major stress to the immune system,
it can increase the chances that a given lesion will progress
to cancer.
Regardless of treatment, one in four HPV-infected people
will have a recurrence within three months.[13]
[1] The cervical dilemma: Some warts may be better
left untreated, Kathy A. Fackelmann, Science News, 139:
362?3, June 8, 1991
[2] HPV doesnt have to spell cancer, Christie
Aschwanden, Health, Jan/Feb 2002
[3] Ibid
[4] .Contagion: A sometimes lethal sexual epidemic that
condoms cant stop, Jerome Groopman, New Yorker,
September 13, 1999
[5] Contagion, Jerome Groopman, New Yorker, 1999
[6] FDA licenses new vaccine
, FDA news release,
June 2006
[7] Contagion, Jerome Groopman, New Yorker, 1999
[8] Natural Healing in Gynecology, Rina Nissim, Pandora, 1984
(p. 43)
[9] Our Bodies, Ourselves, Boston Womens Health Book Collective,
1998
[10] Adding an HPV, Cornell Uni. Womens Health
Advisor, July 2002
[11] One Way to Avoid Unnecessary Testing After Ambiguous
Pap Results, HealthFacts, May 2001
[12] Screening for Cervical Cancer, HealthFacts,
XV (136), Sept 1990
[13] PDR Family Guide to Womens Health, Medical Economics,
1994
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