Your veterinarian may have a remedy to try, or you can shop around for a topical ointment to remove the warts. Some people swear by honey on the surface covered in Duct Tape (yes, that would hurt a lot to peel off, so have some common sense about trying it); others pick at the wart until it bleeds a bit to get the immune system to knock it back down. There is some possibility that Compound W or another commercial human wart remover would work as well, but be aware that these are typically caustic compounds that will hurt if it touches normal teat tissue.
Regardless of what you try (there isn't a single best treatment - even surgical removal isn't necessarily a good option in this location), make sure to keep the medication away from cows or calves that may try to chew on the teat or eat the medication. Also, if the cow is in the milking herd, use NOTHING - there is a risk of the medication getting into the bulk tank and could cost you the entire milking harvest.
It is best to have your veterinarian come and remove them when you first notice them. The vet will cut them off and spray them will an antibacterial spray. If you leave them too long they can continue to grow and the vet may have to freeze the wart in order to remove it.
a vet...
No. Use a specific wart treatment (the freezing ones work well).
Snails do not give you warts.
how do brain warts develope
Yes, there are various creams to treat warts as well as laser treatments to prevent them from coming back.
Plantar warts are, by definition, warts on the bottom of your foot or toes. A wart appearing anywhere else on the body is not a plantar wart, even if it's caused by one of the strains of the human papillomavirus that's generally associated with plantar warts. (If you're asking if it's possible for the virus to spread from a plantar wart to other locations on the body: yes, that's possible. But it wouldn't be CALLED a plantar wart; if it appeared on the palm, for instance, it would be a palmar wart.)
Some patients use prescription Aldara or Veregen to treat genital warts. Treatment of these warts is optional.
Yes
A horses nose is called a muzzle...x
Depends on where the wart is on your body.
Their nose and humongous warts with hairs on them, and their cackle.
it is boogers coming from a horses nose
Use a nice, clean, damp sponge to clean the inside of the horses nose.
Most humans treat horses well, but some humans (unfortunately) abuse them.
Same as us - by breathing in air, which is delivered to the lungs to be exchanged with carbon dioxide, which the horses breathe out.
Go and see your piercer to have them help you figure out what it is and how to treat it.
Yes he is a beg he's also a mug and a waste of space with warts on his nose
No. It is only used to prevent polio.