There are various products in the first aid aisle of your local drug store; but the best technique I have successfully used is to put a piece of Duct Tape over the wart and leave on as long as possible. This deprives the wart of oxygen and eventually will make it disappear. Keep reapplying a small piece of duct tape as needed till gone. It may take a few weeks- but this is the only thing that works for me and is less painful than burning it off.
No! Warts are from a virus and you can't get it from swimming pools.
on the soles of your feet
Perfectly normal.
Washing and cleaning your skin daily. Try to keep your feet (or other appendages) from getting too humid. Wear socks and change them daily. If you have warts, a Doctor with prescribe freezing them off and antibiotics.
Plantar warts typically develop and grow slowly over a period of weeks to months on the feet.
You can go to a doctor and they will prescribe a medicine to help keep the warts on your feet away.
warts
Warts are benign growths caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) and can be classified into several types: common warts (verrucae vulgaris), plantar warts (verrucae plantaris), flat warts (verrucae planae), filiform warts, and genital warts (condylomata acuminata). Each type varies in appearance and location, with common warts typically found on the hands, plantar warts on the soles of the feet, flat warts on the face and legs, filiform warts around the mouth and eyes, and genital warts in the genital area.
you have to freeze it off.
Yes, warts on the bottom of the feet, known as plantar warts, are caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV), but they are not classified as a sexually transmitted disease (STD). HPV has many strains, and those causing plantar warts are different from the strains typically associated with genital warts. While HPV can be transmitted through direct contact, plantar warts usually develop from exposure to the virus in moist environments, such as public showers or swimming pools.
cut if off du
warts, or athletes foot and fungus