Genital wart due to sexually transmitted disease; plural is condyloma acuminata.
A sexually transmitted viral infection that is caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) and produces genital warts (also known as venereal warts). Condyloma acuminatum is currently one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases among men and women living in the United States. The virus is transferred during vaginal sexual intercourse, oral sex, and anal sex. All sexually active people are susceptible, but those with more than one sexual partner and people who have had other sexually transmitted diseases are at greater risk for infection.
A wart, typically found on the genitals, the perineum, the anus, or the mucosal surfaces of the vagina or mouth, usually spread by sexual contact. It is caused by various types of human papilloma virus and may be spread by physical contact with an area containing a wart. The spread of a wart from one labium to the other by autoinoculation is possible. The virus that causes the wart is usually transmitted sexually.
Elongated growths resembling warts, not related to syphilis, that appear on the genital organs. They are also known as verruca acuminata.