
Health

Share
3rd November 2017
12:28pm GMT

The results stated that the risk of these oral cancers is low among people in the 20-69 age bracket but according to the paper, the figure doubled for men who had five or more oral sexual partners during their lifetime and at 7.3 per cent, they were in the 'medium risk' category.
Those in the high-risk category saw the figures jump by double again to 14.9 per cent and those in this group were people who were also smokers.
The illness of HPV was found to be low among all the participants regardless of factors such as smoking when the person involved in the study had one or fewer lifetime oral sex partners.
However, men aged 20-69 with 10 or more oral sex partners had a 14.4 per cent chance of getting oncogenic which causes tumours that develop oral HPV.
Lead author of the study, Amber D'Souza, said men are much more likely to contract the virus than women.
"Most people perform oral sex in their lives, and we found that oral infection with cancer-causing HPV was rare among women regardless of how many oral sex partners they had," she said.
"Among men who did not smoke, cancer-causing oral HPV was rare among everyone who had less [sp] than five oral sex partners, although the chances of having oral HPV infection did increase with number of oral sexual partners, and with smoking."

Health
health