GENITAL WARTS
You have a skin virus infection that causes
warts. This virus is passed from one person to
another by skin-to-skin contact, but most people
are not aware of being exposed to the wart
virus. The virus is very common and can be
transmitted any time there is a break in the
skin and the virus is present. Depending on the
location of the wart and exactly which wart
virus is present, warts can appear differently.
Warts on the hands are most common in children,
but they can occur in other places as well,
including the knees. A plantar wart is any wart
located on the bottom of the foot. Flat warts
are small, barely raised warts, most common over
the backs of the hands, over the face, and over
the lower legs of women who shave their legs.
Warts are not dangerous. They are only important
because they are unattractive. Occasionally, a
wart forms in an area that causes pain from
pressure, as often happens with plantar warts on
the bottom of the foot. In addition, because
warts are viral infections, they sometimes
spread to other areas of the skin, if left
untreated. However, because they are not
dangerous, whether to treat your warts is up to
you. Warts in children usually go away without
treatment. This can happen within weeks or
within years (there is no way to predict this).
Leaving warts to go away of their own accord is
a very reasonable "treatment." Otherwise, warts
have to be destroyed for removal, because there
are no good medications that kill the wart virus
itself. The most common treatments are acids
applied to the warts at home, and liquid
nitrogen treatments in a doctor's office, where
extremely cold liquid is sprayed or applied to
the warts. This painful treatment causes a
blister that, after healing, removes much or all
of the wart along with it. Often, several
treatments spaced about 1 month apart are
required. If you choose to treat your warts at
home, you must take care to do it properly, to
get good results. The area of the wart should be
soaked with warm water until the wart is soft
and white. Medication is applied to the wart
with a cotton-tipped swab (if liquid) or by an
adhesive patch cut to the size of the wart. A
piece of adhesive tape is applied over the
sticky patch to ensure that it stays in place.
Each night the medication and any dead wart are
removed after soaking and sanding the surface
with an emery board or a pumice stone, and
medication is reapplied. In most cases, the wart
will disappear after 1 to 3 months of nightly
treatment. Any new warts during treatment should
be tended to as well.
Copyright 2004
Libby Edwards, M.D.
4335 Colwick Rd., Suite D
Charlotte, NC 28211
Voice: (704) 367-9777 Fax: (704) 367-0504
All rights reserved
