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This forum is an un-mediated, patient-to-patient forum for questions and support regarding HPV issues such as: genital warts, causes, diagnosis, cervical cancer, HPV in men, PAP tests, treatment, telling your spouse or partner
There are steps that you can take to help push an active infection into dormancy, all include living a healthy lifestyle, like exercise, no smoking (which can double the risk for cervical cancer), healthy eating with lots of cruciferous vegetable containing DIM - like brocolli, bok choy, kale etc., adequate rest, low stress, nothing irritating in the vagina (like tampons, perfumes, douching) and using condoms until the infection has cleared. There is research that links viral loads and the body's inability to clear an HPV infection.
I know condoms can be so annoying but there is research showing the benefits of condom use and the body's abilitiy to clear an active infection due to a lower viral load. Once the infection is cleared then you could try going back to not using condoms. It's something for you to think about anyways.
There are a few good sites available, most focus on cervical dysplasia because it is far more common than vaginal and vulva.
Here are a couple of links to a site in regards to vaginal dysplasia/cancer
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/vaginal-cancer/DS00812
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/treatment/vaginal/patient/
Here are a couple of links for vulvar dysplasia/cancer
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/vulvar-cancer/DS00768
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/cri/content/cri_2_4_1x_what_is_vulvar_cancer_45.asp
Here is a link to the National Cervical Cancer Coalition site (now the National HPV Cancer Coalition) It has plenty of good information that can be browsed through.
http://www.nccc-online.org/patient_info/hpv.html
This is a link to another good forum. It is sponsored by the National Cervical Cancer Coalition and many of the members attend the NCCC conferences regularly. The women there run the gamet of experiences and provide plently of up to date, accurate information but most importantly, friendly support!
http://www.inspire.com/groups/national-cervical-cancer-coalition/