It sounds like you're spending hours researching a problem you don't have and for which you are little or no risk. What a waste of time! I have no other advice and won't have any more responses on this thread.
I did some more research and the only pedunculated lesion(stalk like growth) on the soft palate is in fact a wart or what they call a papilloma...now I'm just wondering how I got it....I've been with the same girl for almost 4 years now. If I get this removed and if this is indeed a wart then shes gonna think I cheated on her. Another thing I read is some say they are contagious or not and thats my concern whether it can be passed through saliva even though there was no skin to skin contact or wart to skin contact. Its been two months since that has happened and I havent found an unusual growths below and neither has she.
You have the opinion of a genuine expert, based on direct examination, plus 5 other health professionals who had the same opinion. And now you also want the opinion or a distant, online doctor who is not an expert in that area and can't even see the lesion? You are wasting your time and mine with such a question.
Genital warts appear anywhere from 2 months to 2 years after exposure. I have no way of judging whether you might have caught genital warts that haven't yet appeared.
The doctor of oral and maxillofacial said it looked to be a part of my normal anatomy, could this be true? Can warts in the oral cavity be smooth?
I've been to my urologist twice since demember and said everything looks fine down below and no sign of warts. I havent noticed anything either...if it was a wart do you think they would have showed up below by now?
Do you know of anything that it might be? Like I said it has gotten smaller but has stayed the same size since december. I looked up pedunculated lesions on the soft palate on most are warts but those warts dont look like what I have.
Welcome to the forum.
I have scanned some of your questions and the discussions on the HPV community forum and elsewhere. As best I can tell, you had accurate replies there.
First, as you were told, with 6 (six, for goodness sake!!!) doctors and dentists giving you the consistent opinion that your oral lesion isn't a wart, you can believe it. You don't have an oral wart. It's a waste of your emotional energy and my time to answer speculative questions about a condition you don't have!
Second, the advice about saliva and HPV transmission was accurate on the other forums. Saliva doesn't transmit the virus, as far as we know.
Regards-- HHH, MD