cryotherapy for warts
Last reviewed 01/2018
- cryotherapy is a technique that may be used in the treatment of viral warts
- freezing of the wart is achieved via the use of liquid nitrogen - a temperature
of -196 degrees centigrade can be achieved
- cryotherapy is believed to cause cell damage via intracellular ice formation,
blood supply changes, osmotic effects and immune stimulation. Cryotherapy
does not kill the virus via the cold temperature - it destroys the tissue
in which the virus lives
- number of treatments to cure viral wart - about 75% of patients are cured
after 4 treatments administered at 3-weekly intervals (1)
- disadvantages of this form of treatment include:
- absence of histology - therefore diagnosis cannot be confirmed
- often painful
- possible serious complications of cryotherapy include hypopigmentation, scarring, damage to underlying nerves, tendon rupture, risk of ulcer development (2)
Reference:
- (1) Lawrence C. An introduction to dermatological surgery. Oxford: Blackwell Science, 1996.
- (2) Pulse (1/9/01), 51.