Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting has worked for me. I get them every few years and they always disappear on their own.
I'd wait out the summer, and then make a decision in the fall. I agree that being off his feet after freezing, or trying to keep duct tape on in the summer would be harder than during the school year, so I'd wait for now, and if you decide you do want to treat (e.g. if it's spreading, or becomes uncomfortable, mine never have) do it during the school year.
Please don't wait. Or if you do, make sure your kid isn't using public pools or water parks where they can spread it.
Yes, if your kid is out somewhere barefoot cover them with duct tape. Bandaids don't stay on.
My camp wouldn't let kids with warts participate unless they wore water shoes.
For my kids, one treatment with the beetle juice (cathardin) was enough to stop their warts forever and it's painless. For my oldest, she'd struggled for about 2 years.
Anonymous wrote:Neither. Cathardin. They just paint it on the wart and it forms a blister and comes off. So easy. Freezing is really painful for kids. If you want freezing to work, you have to be okay with the pain and let it keep freezing you. Most kids would have them stop quickly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting has worked for me. I get them every few years and they always disappear on their own.
I'd wait out the summer, and then make a decision in the fall. I agree that being off his feet after freezing, or trying to keep duct tape on in the summer would be harder than during the school year, so I'd wait for now, and if you decide you do want to treat (e.g. if it's spreading, or becomes uncomfortable, mine never have) do it during the school year.
Please don't wait. Or if you do, make sure your kid isn't using public pools or water parks where they can spread it.
Yes, if your kid is out somewhere barefoot cover them with duct tape. Bandaids don't stay on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiting has worked for me. I get them every few years and they always disappear on their own.
I'd wait out the summer, and then make a decision in the fall. I agree that being off his feet after freezing, or trying to keep duct tape on in the summer would be harder than during the school year, so I'd wait for now, and if you decide you do want to treat (e.g. if it's spreading, or becomes uncomfortable, mine never have) do it during the school year.
Please don't wait. Or if you do, make sure your kid isn't using public pools or water parks where they can spread it.
Anonymous wrote:I just went through this with my six year old though his wart was on his heel so more likely to affect his walking.
My experience with the wart bandaid is that they would shift and the medication would end up peeling a section of skin that wasn't covered by the wart.
I used the drops and applied them at night covering with two cris crossed bandaids. I would then scrape the wart gently after bath to get the dead skin off before applying more drops. I did give him a couple breaks if the surrounding skin was getting too tender. It took about 1.5 months and I wasn't constantly diligent and it was a pretty big wart (maybe about 6-7 mm?) that just erupted one day. With smaller ones you could probably clear them faster.
So drops and scraping worked for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Waiting has worked for me. I get them every few years and they always disappear on their own.
I'd wait out the summer, and then make a decision in the fall. I agree that being off his feet after freezing, or trying to keep duct tape on in the summer would be harder than during the school year, so I'd wait for now, and if you decide you do want to treat (e.g. if it's spreading, or becomes uncomfortable, mine never have) do it during the school year.