Plantar warts are caused by an infection with the human papillomavirus (HPV) in the outer layer of skin on the sole of your feet. However, the virus does thrive in warm, moist environments - such as shower floors, locker rooms and public swimming areas. Consequently, you may contract the virus by walking barefoot around pools or gyms.
They look like hard patches of skin, with dark specks in them. They can feel like you are stepping on a small rock, or pebble.
a popped zit
If you take off a planters wart most of the time it grows back worse. I have a lady that I work with who tried to pick it off and has gotten her wart frozen off at the doctor and payed a lot of money to get it surgically removed and it still is coming back.
you actually are put asleep and then they will operate
As a professional dermatologist, I feel compelled to respond this intruding inquiry to provide further dermatological knowledge to the uneducated public. In order to understand the delicate subject of the planters wart, i wish to enlighten you on my credentials. I have studied for 8 and a quarter years under the supervision and mentor ship of Dr Scholl and have received a diploma in dermatological studies. When I was 9 years old, I had a planters wart on the bottom of my foot. By 2 months, it had grown 6 inches in diameter and caused me chronic pain on my left foot. it soon began to turn a deep blue, then purple, then violet. the doctor declared i wore a wart cast that covered the width of my entire leg, and had to use a wheel chair to get around. the only good that came of this 4 year trauma was that kids at school got to sign my wart cast! This experience has inspired me to become a professional dermatologist, and to create a more simple wart treatment method called 'the nearly chronic painless method.' if you of your child has a planters wart, it is likely you will use a treatment similar to the one I created. You will need to wear a leg brace but you will never again feel planter pain.
See a doctor. You'll almost certainly need to see one for the ringworm anyway, and they can have a look at the wart at the same time.
a popped zit
If you take off a planters wart most of the time it grows back worse. I have a lady that I work with who tried to pick it off and has gotten her wart frozen off at the doctor and payed a lot of money to get it surgically removed and it still is coming back.
you actually are put asleep and then they will operate
it wontgo away unless you have a docter cut it out or scoop it out, get it freezed or burned off ( i suggest freezed off it isnt as painful) or you could look at remidees like if you put nail polish over the wart it might go away
They can sometimes look like a hard lump or even a coldsore.
a very ugly ball thats greeney-black
The real answer is wart
As a professional dermatologist, I feel compelled to respond this intruding inquiry to provide further dermatological knowledge to the uneducated public. In order to understand the delicate subject of the planters wart, i wish to enlighten you on my credentials. I have studied for 8 and a quarter years under the supervision and mentor ship of Dr Scholl and have received a diploma in dermatological studies. When I was 9 years old, I had a planters wart on the bottom of my foot. By 2 months, it had grown 6 inches in diameter and caused me chronic pain on my left foot. it soon began to turn a deep blue, then purple, then violet. the doctor declared i wore a wart cast that covered the width of my entire leg, and had to use a wheel chair to get around. the only good that came of this 4 year trauma was that kids at school got to sign my wart cast! This experience has inspired me to become a professional dermatologist, and to create a more simple wart treatment method called 'the nearly chronic painless method.' if you of your child has a planters wart, it is likely you will use a treatment similar to the one I created. You will need to wear a leg brace but you will never again feel planter pain.
And it can't be a gential wart becuz i havent had intercourse
See a doctor. You'll almost certainly need to see one for the ringworm anyway, and they can have a look at the wart at the same time.
She has a wart on her arm.He couldn't stop looking at her wart.
Yes hamsters can get things that look like warts if your hamster does have what you think is a wart take it to a vet staight away because it could be something more serious like a tumour.