You can have HPV without cervical cancer, because there are low-risk strains of HPV. You can also have a high-risk strain and still not develop cervical cancer. You can get cervical cancer without having HPV at all. They are linked. One doesn't immediately mean you have the other.
Doctors know that that certain things, like smoking, or having a history of it in your family, or having HPV, puts you at a greater risk of developing certain kinds of cancer.
A women having rough sex IS NOT AT GREATER RISK OF CERVICAL CANCER. Sex doesn't 'cause' cervical cancer. HPV, a virus you can get during sex has been shown to put women at a greater risk for cervical cancer. Doesn't matter if she had sweet gentle sex, or 'too much' sex, if she got HPV, she has a great risk of getting cancer.
Cervical cancer, like all cancers, does not necessarily spread to the rest of the body. If caught by a doctor early, surgery can remove it reasonably effectively.
killerface answered Friday February 8 2008, 11:57 am: Um, do what? Everyone's different. There's no set time span of how fast "they" get cancer all over. Your question didn't make any sense at all, so I'd advise you either revise it or check google.
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