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- 19 Maggio 2013
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- #21
Beh grazie a tutti, specialmente a quelli che hanno dato risposte serie. Penso che ognuno debba prestare molta attenzione a ciò che fa, però questa è la seconda volta che vado con una escort per cui non so quanto sia possibile che in appena 2 incontri le probabilità di essermi pigliato qualcosa siano alte
Io ero principlamente preoccupato a causa di questo che ho trovato su wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_papillomavirus#Hands
Studies have shown HPV transmission between hands and genitals of the same person and sexual partners. Hernandez tested the genitals and dominant hand of each person in 25 couples every other month for an average of 7 months. She found 2 couples where the man's genitals infected the woman's hand with high risk HPV, 2 where her hand infected his genitals, 1 where her genitals infected his hand, 2 each where he infected his own hand, and she infected her own hand.[42][43] Hands were not the main source of transmission in these 25 couples, but they were significant.
Partridge reports men's fingertips became positive for high risk HPV at more than half the rate (26% per 2 years) as their genitals (48%).[44] Winer reports 14% of fingertip samples from sexually active women were positive.[45] None of these studies reports whether participants were asked to wash or not wash their hands before testing.
Non-sexual hand contact seems to have little or no role in HPV transmission. Winer found all 14 fingertip samples from virgin women negative at the start of her fingertip study.[45] In a separate report on genital HPV infection, 1% of virgin women (1 of 76) with no sexual contact tested positive for HPV, while 10% of virgin women reporting non-penetrative sexual contact were positive (7 of 72).[46]
Once an HPV virion invades a cell, an active infection occurs, and the virus can be transmitted. Several months to years may elapse before squamous intraepithelial lesions (SIL) develop and can be clinically detected. The time from active infection to clinically detectable disease may make it difficult for epidemiologists to establish which partner was the source of infection.[70]
If a college woman has at least one different partner per year for four years, the probability that she will leave college with an HPV infection is greater than 85%.[41] Condoms do not completely protect from the virus because the areas around the genitals including the inner thigh area are not covered, thus exposing these areas to the infected person’s skin.[41]
Io ero principlamente preoccupato a causa di questo che ho trovato su wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_papillomavirus#Hands
Studies have shown HPV transmission between hands and genitals of the same person and sexual partners. Hernandez tested the genitals and dominant hand of each person in 25 couples every other month for an average of 7 months. She found 2 couples where the man's genitals infected the woman's hand with high risk HPV, 2 where her hand infected his genitals, 1 where her genitals infected his hand, 2 each where he infected his own hand, and she infected her own hand.[42][43] Hands were not the main source of transmission in these 25 couples, but they were significant.
Partridge reports men's fingertips became positive for high risk HPV at more than half the rate (26% per 2 years) as their genitals (48%).[44] Winer reports 14% of fingertip samples from sexually active women were positive.[45] None of these studies reports whether participants were asked to wash or not wash their hands before testing.
Non-sexual hand contact seems to have little or no role in HPV transmission. Winer found all 14 fingertip samples from virgin women negative at the start of her fingertip study.[45] In a separate report on genital HPV infection, 1% of virgin women (1 of 76) with no sexual contact tested positive for HPV, while 10% of virgin women reporting non-penetrative sexual contact were positive (7 of 72).[46]
Once an HPV virion invades a cell, an active infection occurs, and the virus can be transmitted. Several months to years may elapse before squamous intraepithelial lesions (SIL) develop and can be clinically detected. The time from active infection to clinically detectable disease may make it difficult for epidemiologists to establish which partner was the source of infection.[70]
If a college woman has at least one different partner per year for four years, the probability that she will leave college with an HPV infection is greater than 85%.[41] Condoms do not completely protect from the virus because the areas around the genitals including the inner thigh area are not covered, thus exposing these areas to the infected person’s skin.[41]