Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Podiatrist for microwave treatment. My child's was huge and gone after 2 treatments. Not cheap but it works. The treatments are spaced 4 weeks apart.
This is truly the only thing that actually works to get rid of it for good. It's expensive but it really works. My kid's wart hasn't come back and it's been over a year since the last microwave treatment. With 2 treatments it was gone. We had this don't at foxhall podiatry.
Anonymous wrote:Podiatrist for microwave treatment. My child's was huge and gone after 2 treatments. Not cheap but it works. The treatments are spaced 4 weeks apart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you to the poster who recommended the wart stick from Amazon. My son has gone to the podiatrist repeatedly for treatments with little success, but this worked. It took ~2 months of consistent use, but the warts are almost gone. Thank you for saving me a bundle on copays/coinsurance
I’m the one who recommended it. Just curious if it is gone for good now.
It's not gone entirely - he had a large one and several small ones. The smaller ones are gone, and the largest one is about 85% gone. He's continuing to use the wart stick as it seems to work just as well as the scraping procedures he was getting done at the doctor's office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you to the poster who recommended the wart stick from Amazon. My son has gone to the podiatrist repeatedly for treatments with little success, but this worked. It took ~2 months of consistent use, but the warts are almost gone. Thank you for saving me a bundle on copays/coinsurance
I’m the one who recommended it. Just curious if it is gone for good now.
It's not gone entirely - he had a large one and several small ones. The smaller ones are gone, and the largest one is about 85% gone. He's continuing to use the wart stick as it seems to work just as well as the scraping procedures he was getting done at the doctor's office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you to the poster who recommended the wart stick from Amazon. My son has gone to the podiatrist repeatedly for treatments with little success, but this worked. It took ~2 months of consistent use, but the warts are almost gone. Thank you for saving me a bundle on copays/coinsurance
I’m the one who recommended it. Just curious if it is gone for good now.
Anonymous wrote:If it is a plantar wart: When the wart is soft (e.g., after bathing) file it with an emery board, apply liquid wart remover (can be purchased from any drug store), then cover with duct tape. Repeat each time the tape comes off. It will take a few months, but it should eventually work. This was the guidance I received each time after seeing a dermatologist and having the wart frozen with liquid nitrogen, which may hasten getting rid of the wart but is not actually necessary to get rid of it.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you to the poster who recommended the wart stick from Amazon. My son has gone to the podiatrist repeatedly for treatments with little success, but this worked. It took ~2 months of consistent use, but the warts are almost gone. Thank you for saving me a bundle on copays/coinsurance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How could warts be so common? Aren't these places cleaned and bleached to kill microorganisms??
I think some people are just more susceptible to the virus that causes warts. Both of my kids swim, and they share a bathroom. Only one of them has an issue with warts. The other kid doesn't get them at all.
Pretty much everyone gets some form of an HPV virus at some point in their lives. You can pick them up pretty much anywhere, some strains can live on surfaces for a week.
All HPV is not equal. Some is awful. Some are deadly.
Labeling it all as just HPV is trying to normalize spreading of disease/stds/filth. The question is, why would you want to do that?
Anonymous wrote:If it is a plantar wart: When the wart is soft (e.g., after bathing) file it with an emery board, apply liquid wart remover (can be purchased from any drug store), then cover with duct tape. Repeat each time the tape comes off. It will take a few months, but it should eventually work. This was the guidance I received each time after seeing a dermatologist and having the wart frozen with liquid nitrogen, which may hasten getting rid of the wart but is not actually necessary to get rid of it.