treatment
Last reviewed 01/2018
The kindest treatment if it is painless is to leave it hoping that it will resolve spontaneously. Treatment may be indicated:
- for a painful plantar wart
- in immunosuppressed
- in resistant cases
- if the patient prefers when they understand the natural history of the plantar wart
Options include:
- first-line treatments
- salicylic acid as plasters, colloidon, gel, paint or combined with podophyllum resin. The addition of lactic acid theoretically makes it more effective. Often takes as long as 8 weeks to work and surrounding skin needs protection - need a dextrous well motivated patient
- formaldehyde and gluteraldehyde are not used much as they produce sensitisation, desiccation, and are unpleasant
- second-line treatments
- cryotherapy is generally effective. It usually needs at least 2 treatments, 4 in resistant cases.
- third-line treatments
- options include surgical excision or curettage and bleomycin injections, topical immunotherapy, pulsed dye laser, CO2 laser, photodynamic therapy, and retinoids (1).
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