Genital Warts Removal Los Angeles
Best Genital anal warts treatment using innovative method HPV BCR™️. Dr. Arani HPV genital Anal warts removal treatment and information center in United Satates. Painless bloodless Surgical destruction and permanent treatment warts cure in los Angeles and OC California. Your first shot is your best shot when treating genital / anal warts. It is imperative that you choose the right institution, physician, and method to minimize recurrence and scar development. There are many treatment modalities available to HPV infected patients (freezing, Acid, cream, non-fda topical, laser) due to multilateral approach and ongoing search for new and better ways to treat genital warts. Every doctor and clinician has his or her own certain preferences for treatment. Dr. Arani’s innovative approach of One Session 3-Step Micro Surgical Destruction (BCR™) comes from his years of experience exclusively treating HPV warts. He has mastered his technique of micro removal, performing many of these procedures with the use of a microscope. Micro-surgical instruments are utilized for removal followed by 2 additional destruction steps to eliminate the growth once for all. If other methods has failed to get rid of your HPV growth permanently then our Micro-surgical BCR™ method is an effective approach. Laser will not be used in this treatment. According to WebMD, laser success rate for genital warts is only 20-40%. Dr. Arani does not recommend laser treatment for persistent genital HPV infection, click here for more information.
What Is HPV?
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection among humans today. About 20 million Americans are currently infected, and about 5.5 million people become newly infected each year. HPV is comprised of more than 100 different variations of HPV, with more than 40 of these variations affecting the human population. Infectious Life and Transmission: Double stranded Human Papilloma Virus enters the skin and passes its DNA to the proliferative layer of the skin genome and as a result, undesirable proliferations will occur which appear as warts. Inoculation without manifestation of warts may take from a week to 18 months or more. It means you may have been infected with HPV but won't develop a visible wart until a much later time. This is the reason why we ask our patients to return to the clinic for a re-evaluation after 6 months and 2 years to make sure that they don't have a new wart. Some individuals are naturally resistant to HPV viruses and don't become infected as easily as others. HPV warts are a contagious infection and spread easier by manipulation such as scratching or shaving.
Location of Warts: This affects both females and males. In addition to the scrotum, the penis, vulva, perineum, and perianal skin, genital warts can also occur on the cervix, vagina, urethra, anus, and mouth. Intra-anal warts are seen predominantly in patients who have had receptive anal intercourse; Anoscopy or anal pap smears might be needed for these patients. These warts are distinct from perianal warts, which can occur in both men and women who have never had anal sex. We diagnose and treat most of those external wart. Human papilloma virus has tissue affinity. It means that each HPV like to infect certain part of the body and not others. At many instances, wart started in one part of the body and will extend to other part. For Example, sexual intercourse may infect you and you get genital warts, then you infect yourself and waarts will extend to different area such as scrotal, anal or pubic area. Treating physician must examine the patient carefully of not missing any warts which may contribute to further infection. During your visit we will fully examine you with different diagnostic tools such as filtered light, Microscope or Macroscope to make sure we are not missing any warts at time of the treatment. Physician must have an important goal at the time of the treatment and that would be that there will be no warts left when patient leave the clinic. Area of the infection has its own characteristic. That is important element because the technical approach might be different. Pubic skin is thicker, Scrotum is thinner. Penile skin is keratinized while anal skin is mucosal. Using protection such as condom will somewhat protect the area in which has been exposed in sexual contact, However, there is no condom coverage on scrotum, pubic, anal, gron, medial legs perineum or anal area. In many instances I see the condom user patient get genital warts just above condom coverage ring so I could assume that patient usually use protection, but of course no condom would cover all part of sexual organ.
Diagnosis: Not every growth on the genitalia is a genital wart by HPV. It must be diagnosed by an experienced medical doctor. We provide a diagnostic service after initial consultation and evaluation. Diagnosis could be confirmed by a biopsy as well, the physician may decide for biopsy, for example, if the size of the warts are big and bleeding or pigmented. Acetic acid application (vinegar test) is not sensitive and not a reliable test. Physician experience is a major factor in diagnosing warts early and treating them immediately for more successful outcome. There is no blood test for HPV or genital warts, so we can not tell the overall status of an individual's HPV. The virus does not circulate in blood and that is why we do not do blood test for the diagnosis. There is limited testing for females consisting of an element of typing for the cervix but not for men. If the HPV causes visible genital skin growth, then the doctor examination is the most important factor.
Treatment:Life is filled with beauty and darkness. We fight to win, sometimes victoriously and other times not, but the point is that we get up and fight again, learn a lifetime experience and put it behind us. However, as humans we tend to stop fighting if there is no chance of winning. To win, it is necessary to have the right tools and preparation, including strength and knowledge of the enemy's behavior. Genital warts are the product of a virus that works from within the body's cells; to battle it, the immune system must be as strong as possible. Worry or depression can weaken the immune system, which is one of the reasons why it is so important for patients to be educated about their condition; the more that is known, the better the chance to fight it. With regard to genital warts, each wart must be approached differently. There is no quick and easy treatment such as a pill that will eliminate them. Each wart must be examined individually and its features evaluated; how big it is, its thickness, its location, the color, whether it was previously treated, if it is associated with scarring, the rapidness of its growth, and the length of time it has been present must all be taken into consideration. One method of treatment does not fit all warts so it would not be appropriate for a treating clinician to treat all warts with liquid nitrogen without regard to the wart's individual characteristics. Likewise, FDA-approved creams would not be the most optimal treatment for prominent warts and non-FDA-approved creams would never be recommended due to serious damage, and exacerbation of infection. Our approach for the treatment might be different from person to person which depend on location, size and quantity of warts but our ultimate goal of genital warts treatment is a: One-time treatment for each individual wart. This is a significant accomplishment in my practice due to the fact that there is a very high relapse rate of genital warts regrowth after removal by any method. You may know this already if you underwent previous treatment. We may have no control over new growths of genital warts in other areas, but our goal is to keep the population of genital warts at zero percent for a certain period of time. If there are no "parental warts," then there is more of a chance that “offspring warts” will not develop. We can provide surgical destruction for what lesions we can see, but this is not possible with what we cannot see, so we map the skin and evaluate it thoroughly. I look at the area with a microscope, ensure that all warts are removed, and then hope for the best as far as new growths. I have frequently seen patients with multiple treatments of their warts who have had significant relapse rates. My main objective is to treat genital warts with no relapses on the same wart at the treatment site. Although there is no 100% guaranteed with any type of surgery, the first shot at treatment should be the best one. The tools of treatment are only as good as the treating physician's talent and skill.
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