Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Bumps on penile corona and skin depigmentation

I met a girl in June last year and we mostly had protected sex and we had a mere 3 second moment of unprotected sex. After a month she told me that she had HPV strain 52 which is more usual in Women's cervix (I think) and she does not have warts. We also shared a bath.

In August and September i had two procedures for crushing of my stone in ureter through catheter.

I had been noticing a small bump on corona of my penis and i cant exactly remember was it before or after the encounter with that girl. With that now, the whole corona is filled with small skin colored bumps. With one of them slightly bigger in size (The first one) having a small depression in the middle. Also have some small bumps on the head of penis with cracking skin. But the depigmentation on the shaft i remember was before meeting the girl and it  started when i used an oil/lubricant for masturbation. Now the white patch is sort of increasing though when the area is moist, the white patches go away.

The bumps on corona do not itch and do not hurt though they are rougher than the normal skin.

I am really really scared.

My questions are

1. Can 52 strain change and give me 6 or 11 for warts? If they are warts.
2. How do i know what it is?
3. Is there anyway i can show you picture? would that help you diagnose it better?
4. Are White depigmentation and small bumps ever related to Bumps on corona?
5. My procedures had the inside of my penis hurt due to catheter. can this infection spread to other parts of body too?
0 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Men's Health Community

Top Men's Health Answerers
1622896 tn?1562364967
London, United Kingdom
139792 tn?1498585650
Indore, India
Avatar universal
Southwest , MI
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
STDs can't be transmitted by casual contact, like hugging or touching.
Syphilis is an STD that is transmitted by oral, genital and anal sex.
Discharge often isn't normal, and could mean an infection or an STD.
Chlamydia, an STI, often has no symptoms, but must be treated.
Bumps in the genital area might be STDs, but are usually not serious.
Get the facts about this disease that affects more than 240,000 men each year.