Warts: can they be prevented?

Escrito por: Professor Andrew Wright
Publicado: | Actualizado: 05/09/2023
Editado por: Laura Burgess

 

Warts can grow anywhere on the body and are likely to occur on those who have a weakened immune system. Over time, most warts can disappear by themselves, however, there are treatment options for those who have large warts or if they have grown in any sensitive or embarrassing areas on the body and face. One of our top dermatologists Professor Andrew Wright explains whether warts can be prevented and how they might be treated.

What causes warts?

Warts are caused by a viral infection. The virus gets into an area of the skin altering the skin cells to enable them to produce more wart virus particles. The site of the wart is typically where the infection was caught, so hands from touching other people or infected objects are a common site, as are the feet where strangely warts are often commonly termed verrucas.

Warts are also relatively common on the face, particularly in children, the infection usually being transferred from the hands to the face by touching. Once present warts are usually raised, having a roughened and sometimes frond-like surface. Some warts are smooth and flatter surfaced, these are often referred to as plane warts.
 

How do warts disappear?

The spontaneous disappearance of a wart is usually as a result of becoming immune to the wart virus. This immunity can be slow to develop, probably because the site of the infection in the outer layer of the skin, but once immunity develops warts will slowly disappear. There is no easy way to stimulate the development of this immunity but various applied treatments can help to produce this.
 

Can warts be medically treated?

Treating warts is difficult, wart paints are designed to kill off the wart of verruca layer by layer and need to be applied regularly following the manufacturer’s instructions. Freezing with liquid nitrogen has been scientifically shown to be effective but can be very time consuming and needs to be done regularly. Isolated warts can be treated surgically with either excision or cautery but the lesions can often recur and such treatment isn’t suitable for multiple warts.
 

Can warts be prevented?

It is difficult to avoid catching warts. There are certain environments where an infection is much more likely such as swimming pools and changing rooms. Wearing flip-flops in changing areas and plastic shoes or socks in and around swimming pools can help to reduce infection. Within a household, anybody with verrucas should not walk barefoot and should have their own bathmat and anyone with warts should not share a towel.
 

How are warts treated?

Most doctors would advise monitoring warts and treating them with simple treatments such as wart paint. The relatively poor response to other treatments such as freezing means that many healthcare services will not fund such treatment except in exceptional circumstances.

Treatment may be considered appropriate for certain verrucas, especially if painful, in people whose jobs involve standing for long periods, or where a lesion is in a cosmetically embarrassing site, such as the face, but even in these circumstances treatment is not easy and response may be slow. Freezing treatment can be quite painful and is unlikely to be tolerated in children under the age of 6-7 years. Wart paints are generally not suitable for the face.
 

Who is most likely at risk of warts?

One group of people who are at risk from warts are those who are immunosuppressed, particularly those with solid organ transplants. In this group of people there can be multiple, large and resistant warts, and on very rare occasions this can transform into a form of skin cancer. Every effort is therefore made to treat warts in this group of patients.



For any of your dermatological needs, you can book an appointment with Professor Wright via his Top Doctor’s profile here.

Por Professor Andrew Wright
Dermatología

El profesor Andrew Leslie Wright es dermatólogo consultor en Bradford y Leeds y se especializa en eccema , psoriasis , cáncer de piel y alergias cutáneas .

Habiendo decidido especializarse en dermatología, el profesor Wright adquirió la mayor experiencia médica posible trabajando en una unidad de enfermedades infecciosas, en medicina torácica, cardiología y endocrinología. Pasó seis meses trabajando en una unidad de atención coronaria y seis meses en un departamento de urgencias donde adquirió experiencia con una amplia variedad de procedimientos prácticos.

El profesor Wright pasó seis meses en el Departamento de Dermatología de Rupert Hallam, Sheffield como parte de una rotación médica. Luego pasó 20 meses en el Departamento de Dermatología de la Universidad, Royal Infirmary, Edimburgo.

El profesor Wright se compromete a enseñar a estudiantes de medicina de pregrado tanto en la clínica ambulatoria como en cursos formales de conferencias. Supervisa a los estudiantes que realizan módulos de estudio especiales y examina a los estudiantes de medicina de la Universidad de Leeds. Es profesor visitante honorario en la Universidad de Bradford y miembro del Centro de Ciencias de la Piel de la Universidad de Bradford.

Ha aparecido en televisión, tanto en vivo como grabado, en numerosas ocasiones y ha realizado muchas entrevistas de radio, particularmente con respecto a la conciencia solar y el cáncer de piel. Recientemente ha contribuido a dos episodios del programa Channel 4 Embarrassing Bodies.

El profesor Wright es miembro de varias sociedades profesionales, incluidas la Asociación Británica de Dermatólogos, la Sociedad Europea de Dermatitis de Contacto, la Sociedad Británica de Dermatología de Investigación y la Sociedad Británica de Cabello y Uñas.

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