With everyone's understanding of the symptoms of cervical cancer, more and more people are currently choosing to get the hpv vaccine, but some people are still in a state of confusion. While hoping to get the HPV vaccine as soon as possible, they are also worried about the side effects of the vaccine! What are the side effects of
HPV vaccine? Should I fight?
Everyone knows that some vaccines have more or less side effects after injection, and HPV vaccine is no exception.
As long as people who are not contraindicated to get vaccinated, the HPV vaccine is generally safe and has relatively small side effects. For a few people with sensitive bodies, some obvious reactions may occur, but they usually disappear in a short period of time.
According to the current clinical manifestations, the side effects of women after HPV vaccine are mainly dizziness, fever, nausea, vomiting, muscle weakness, paralysis, etc., but most of them are relatively mild. In addition, some people may also experience swelling of the injection site, rash , pain, and allergic reactions, but these side effects are normal.
HPV vaccines mainly include bivalent, tetravalent and nine-valent vaccines. Different vaccines have different HPV virus subtypes, and the ages required for vaccination are different; some health experts say that many reactions come from the injection behavior itself, rather than the injection of vaccines. Therefore, women who want to get vaccinated do not need to worry too much about the serious side effects of HPV vaccine.
If you have infected with hpv and have not turned negative, can you get vaccinated?
Theoretically speaking, most HPV infections are transient, and 80% of patients will automatically clear within 6-24 months. However, in clinical work, we cannot predict which people are transient, which people are persistent, and the time when each individual eventually turns negative.
Waiting for HPV to turn negative is a passive process, and there are too many uncertain factors, and new subtypes are likely to be infected during this period.
For patients infected with HPV, the infection type is often a single type, but the vaccine can protect multiple types of , , so it can also have a good preventive effect on patients who have been infected with HPV.