Anonymous wrote:My pediatrician wouldn't treat them so we waited it out w/ my oldest. It took months. Then the following year my 2nd got them and out of desperation I bought a bunch of stuff on amazon. ONe thing was a lemon oil salve type thing. We coated them w/ it every night w/ a qtip and then covered w/ bandaids. They went away in about 2-3 weeks. I asked my dermatologist & she said that could have worked by keeping the core smothered basically and irritating it enough. I was skeptical but then this jan got 2 myself (I think from the shower/towels at the gym). I bought the same stuff from amazon and they went away in about 2 weeks once again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you recommend a dermatologist in MoCo who is likely to treat it?
I don’t want to take my kid to a derm who will just tell me to leave it alone. And I’m definitely not interested in waiting months or years for it to resolve on its own.
Ugh.
Whether or not you find a dermatologist to freeze them or apply beetle juice to them, it will take months or years for it (the viral
Process causing it) to resolve.
After the removal (which can be painful for most kids), those specific spots are gone, but much of the time more just crop up in other places since the virus is still in the body.
A Hopkins Peds derm once told me that she tells parents it’s her job, as a dermatologist, to persuade them to just leave the bumps alone since that will give the lowest risk of any scarring (as opposed to treating them) and that it’s a completely harmless viral rash. She says that many parents refuse to be persuaded, so she will remove them. And some of those kids end up with scarring.
I hear ya—and I’ve read similar statements by pediatric dermatologists online. But interestingly, several posters in this thread seem to indicate the intervention did work (without subsequent outbreaks).
For sure you can luck out- if you weren’t going to get any new spots by then anyways , for example. And that happens a bunch. No good way to know that or not. And the scarring risk is still increased with the treatment. Parents feel very icky about molluscum, in my experience, but it’s really one of those very harmless things that’s best left alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you recommend a dermatologist in MoCo who is likely to treat it?
I don’t want to take my kid to a derm who will just tell me to leave it alone. And I’m definitely not interested in waiting months or years for it to resolve on its own.
Ugh.
Whether or not you find a dermatologist to freeze them or apply beetle juice to them, it will take months or years for it (the viral
Process causing it) to resolve.
After the removal (which can be painful for most kids), those specific spots are gone, but much of the time more just crop up in other places since the virus is still in the body.
A Hopkins Peds derm once told me that she tells parents it’s her job, as a dermatologist, to persuade them to just leave the bumps alone since that will give the lowest risk of any scarring (as opposed to treating them) and that it’s a completely harmless viral rash. She says that many parents refuse to be persuaded, so she will remove them. And some of those kids end up with scarring.
I hear ya—and I’ve read similar statements by pediatric dermatologists online. But interestingly, several posters in this thread seem to indicate the intervention did work (without subsequent outbreaks).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you recommend a dermatologist in MoCo who is likely to treat it?
I don’t want to take my kid to a derm who will just tell me to leave it alone. And I’m definitely not interested in waiting months or years for it to resolve on its own.
Ugh.
Whether or not you find a dermatologist to freeze them or apply beetle juice to them, it will take months or years for it (the viral
Process causing it) to resolve.
After the removal (which can be painful for most kids), those specific spots are gone, but much of the time more just crop up in other places since the virus is still in the body.
A Hopkins Peds derm once told me that she tells parents it’s her job, as a dermatologist, to persuade them to just leave the bumps alone since that will give the lowest risk of any scarring (as opposed to treating them) and that it’s a completely harmless viral rash. She says that many parents refuse to be persuaded, so she will remove them. And some of those kids end up with scarring.
Anonymous wrote:Can you recommend a dermatologist in MoCo who is likely to treat it?
I don’t want to take my kid to a derm who will just tell me to leave it alone. And I’m definitely not interested in waiting months or years for it to resolve on its own.
Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Can you recommend a dermatologist in MoCo who is likely to treat it?
I don’t want to take my kid to a derm who will just tell me to leave it alone. And I’m definitely not interested in waiting months or years for it to resolve on its own.
Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Cantharone is extract from beetle juice that is a blistering solution used to treat viral conditions like mollusca. It’s hurts so much less than freezing. They dab a tiny amount on each mollusca and it will create a tiny blister so they open and drain. As long as the ozzing is covered it will go away in no time. Your pediatrician can certainly do this.