2014
DOI: 10.5533/dst-2177-8264-2014261-409
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Human papillomavirus infection in multiple sites

Abstract: Introduction: Studies concerning human papillomavirus natural history have been focused on cervical infection and disease, but have scarcely described anal infections, especially in clinically health population. Hence, knowledge on HPV natural history is recently being investigated although viral maintenance in hosts is poorly understood. Detection on diverse, extragenital sites may add in the elucidation of infection-dissemination-reinfection cycle reported on the human genital tract. Besides that, it is evid… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Among the 3,447 patients seen, the prevalence of infection was higher in women (37.5%). Cordeiro et al 35 show that the number of genital cases is similar between both sexes. However, the group of sexually active women is more affected by infection, mainly due to the development of intraepithelial lesions and due to some biological aspects that make them susceptible to the virus, such as cervical immaturity, inadequate mucus production, and increased cervical ectopy 36 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Among the 3,447 patients seen, the prevalence of infection was higher in women (37.5%). Cordeiro et al 35 show that the number of genital cases is similar between both sexes. However, the group of sexually active women is more affected by infection, mainly due to the development of intraepithelial lesions and due to some biological aspects that make them susceptible to the virus, such as cervical immaturity, inadequate mucus production, and increased cervical ectopy 36 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…To date, approximately 200 genotypes of HPV have been identified; among them, 40 can infect the human anogenital tract 2 .Genotypes are categorized as low and high risk for developing malignant lesions. Fifteen types were classified as high risk (16,18,31,33,35,39,45,51,52,56,58,59, 68, 73, and 82), three were classified as likely to be high risk (26, 53, and 66), and 12 as low risk (6,11,40,42,43,44,54,61,70,72, 81, and CP6108) 3 . These anogenital HPVs are associated with a broad spectrum of diseases, such as cervical, vaginal, vulvar, anal, perianal, and colorectal cancer, as well as benign proliferative lesions such as anogenital warts or condylomata acuminate [4][5][6][7] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%