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Juvenile Warts - Traits and Removal Treatments


A juvenile wart (also known as a flat wart) is actually a non-cancerous tumor that poses no serious threat. Children experience Juvenile warts more often than adults. Young people usually carry it on their face, arms, hands, and knees.

The human papilloma virus or HPV is the culprit. This kind of virus is typically located in wet and warm climates. Because of this, they're commonly found in restrooms and near swimming pools.

It typically invades the body via minor cuts or skin abrasions. If you want to reduce the possibility of being exposed to the human papilloma virus, it is imperative that you do not stand in communal showers or on wet floors around swimming pools without shoes or sandals covering your feet.

The human papilloma virus is contagious and can be transmitted from person to person. Sometimes a person can carry the virus for several months or even years until it actually manifests into a wart. This makes it difficult to determine how the virus was contracted.

Even though juvenile warts are not at all dangerous and have extremely little risk for causing other medical problems, they do tend to multiply in number. Therefore they must be attended to promptly, also another vital reason for treating them is that they may cause issues with the self-confidence of the child or teen.

You can get many treatments for warts at your local drug store. Sadly, they are usually ineffective. While these may kill the wart, it may reappear later. There are wart removers than can be harmful to the surrounding skin.

You can have a juvenile wart surgically removed with electrosurgery, cryosurgery, or laser treatment.

When a wart is treated using electrosurgery, the doctor performs the surgery with a heated needle. Anesthesia is used to dull the pain during this process. One problem with having a wart surgically removed is that the procedure usually renders a scar on the skin.

A juvenile wart can be medically frozen and removed, a process called cryosurgery. Generally, an anesthesia is applied; you may need more than one session to completely remove the same wart.

Laser therapy involves directing a powerful beam of light to the wart to 'burn' it. This type of treatment can be extremely expensive especially if there are a lot of warts.

Alternative and home treatments for warts are available that may effectively get rid of your juvenile warts. Even though not all of these techniques work, there are some that really do work and these techniques have been used successfully for a long time.



Author Resource:- Find out about how to remove skin tags as well as how to remove warts.

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By : Jessie Stone    19 or more times read
Submitted 2011-10-26 15:22:12
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