Treatments for Genital warts
Treatments for Genital warts
The list of treatments mentioned in various sources
for Genital warts
includes the following list.
Always seek professional medical advice about any treatment
or change in treatment plans.
- Medications
- Imiquimod cream, 20% podophyllin anti-mitotic solution
- Podophyllo-toxin paint
- 0.5% podofilox solution
- 5% 5-fluorouracil cream
- Trichloroacetic acid (TCA)
- Wart removal procedures
- Alpha interferon - injected into the warts
- General treatment issues
- Do not use ordinary skin wart treatments
- Diagnose and treat all sexual partners
- Avoid sex during treatment
- Avoid touching warts - this may spread the disease to yourself or others.
- Avoid scratching warts
- Special treatment considerations if you are or may be pregnant
- Ablative therapy
- Cryotherapy
- Surgical excision
- Immune based therapy
- Electrodesiccation
- Carbon dioxide laser treatment
- Keratolytics
- Podophyllum resin
- Podocon-25
- Podo-ben-25
- Podofin
- Podofix
- Condylox
- Trichloroacetic acid
- Tri-chlor
- 5-fluorouracil
- Efudex
- Fluoroplex
Genital warts: Is the Diagnosis Correct?
The first step in getting correct treatment is
to get a correct diagnosis.
Differential diagnosis list for Genital warts may include:
Hidden causes of Genital warts may be incorrectly diagnosed:
Genital warts: Marketplace Products, Discounts & Offers
Products, offers and promotion categories available for Genital warts:
Genital warts: Research Doctors & Specialists
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Drugs and Medications used to treat Genital warts:
Note:You must always seek professional medical advice about any prescription drug, OTC drug, medication, treatment
or change in treatment plans.
Some of the different medications used in the treatment of Genital warts include:
Unlabeled Drugs and Medications to treat Genital warts:
Unlabelled alternative drug treatments for Genital warts include:
Latest treatments for Genital warts:
The following are some of the latest treatments for Genital warts:
Hospitals & Medical Clinics: Genital warts
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for hospitals and medical facilities in specialties related to Genital warts:
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More general information, not necessarily in relation to Genital warts,
on hospital and medical facility performance and surgical care quality:
Medical news summaries about treatments for Genital warts:
The following medical news items
are relevant to treatment of Genital warts:
Discussion of treatments for Genital warts:
HPV: DSTD (Excerpt)
Visible genital warts can be removed,
but no treatment is better than another, and no single treatment is
ideal for all cases. (Source: excerpt from HPV: DSTD)
Human Papillomavirus and Genital Warts, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID (Excerpt)
Genital warts often
disappear even without treatment. In other cases, they eventually
may develop a fleshy, small raised growth that looks like
cauliflower. There is no way to predict whether the warts will grow
or disappear. Therefore, if you suspect you have genital warts, you
should be examined and treated, if necessary.
Depending on
factors such as the size and location of the genital warts, a doctor
will offer you one of several ways to treat them.
- Imiquimod, an immune response cream which you can apply to the
affected area
- A 20 percent podophyllin anti-mitotic solution, which you can
apply to the affected area and later wash off
- A 0.5 percent podofilox solution, applied to the affected area
but shouldn’t be washed off
- A 5 percent 5-fluorouracil cream
- Trichloroacetic acid (TCA)
If you are pregnant, you
should not use podophyllin or podofilox because they are absorbed by
the skin and may cause birth defects in your baby. In addition, you
should not use 5-fluorouracil cream if you are expecting.
If
you have small warts, the doctor can remove them by freezing
(cryosurgery), burning (electrocautery), or laser treatment.
Occasionally, the doctor will have to use surgery to remove large
warts that have not responded to other treatment.
Some
doctors use the antiviral drug alpha interferon, which they inject
directly into the warts, to treat warts that have returned after
removal by traditional means. The drug is expensive, however, and
does not reduce the rate that the genital warts
return.
Although treatments can get rid of the warts, none
gets rid of the virus. Because the virus is still present in your
body, warts often come back after treatment.
(Source: excerpt from
Human Papillomavirus and Genital Warts, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID)
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Book Excerpts: Treatment of Genital warts
Treatments of Genital warts: Online Medical Books
16 MEDICAL BOOKS ONLINE!
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for more information about the treatments of Genital warts.
Genital warts:
Treatment
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Treatment is mostly for cosmetic reasons and should be guided by the patient’s preference. Treatment aims to remove exophytic warts and to ameliorate signs and symptoms. Topical drug therapy (10% to 25% podophyllum in compound benzoin tincture, trichloroacetic acid, or dichloroacetic acid) removes small warts. (Podophyllum is contraindicated in pregnancy.) Warts larger than 2.5 cm are generally removed by carbon dioxide laser treatment, cryosurgery, or electrocautery. Other treatments include Podofilox, Imiquimod, interferon, and combined laser and interferon therapy. No therapy has proved effective in eradicating HPV; relapse is common.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Warts:
Treatment
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Treatment for warts varies according to the location, size, number, pain level (present and projected), history of therapy, the patient’s age, and compliance with treatment. Most persons eventually develop an immune response that causes warts to disappear spontaneously and require no treatment.
Treatment may include:
❑ Electrodesiccation and curettage: High-frequency electric current destroys the wart and is followed by surgical removal of dead tissue at the base and application of an antibiotic ointment (such as polysporin), covered with a bandage, for 48 hours. This method is effective for common, filiform and, occasionally, plantar warts. (See Removing warts by electrosurgery.)
❑ Cryotherapy: Liquid nitrogen kills the wart; the resulting dried blister is peeled off several days later. If initial treatment isn’t successful, it can be repeated at 2- to 4-week intervals. This method is useful either for periungual warts or for common warts on the face, extremities, penis, vagina, or anus.
❑ Acid therapy (primary or adjunctive): The patient applies plaster patches impregnated with acid (such as 40% salicylic acid plasters) or acid drops (such as 5% to 16.7% salicylic acid in flexible collodion or trichloroacetic or dichloroacetic acids), every 12 to 24 hours for 2 to 4 weeks. This method isn’t recommended for areas where perspiration is heavy, for those parts that are likely to get wet, or for exposed body parts where patches are cosmetically undesirable.
❑ 25% podophyllin in compound with tincture of benzoin (for venereal warts): The podophyllin solution is applied on moist warts. The patient must lie still while it dries, leave it on for 4 hours, and then wash it off with soap and water. Treatment may be repeated every 3 to 4 days and, in some cases, must be left on a maximum of 24 hours, depending on the patient’s tolerance. Avoid using this drug on pregnant patients.
During acid or podophyllin therapy, the patient should protect the surrounding area with petroleum jelly or sodium bicarbonate (baking soda). A small amount of 25% to 50% trichloroacetic acid (for venereal warts) is applied to the wart. After the wart turns white, the acid is neutralized with baking soda or water.
❑ Carbon dioxide laser therapy: This treatment has successfully treated genital warts.
The use of antiviral drugs is under investigation; suggestion and hypnosis are occasionally successful, especially with children. Patients can apply topical imiquimod cream to sites that aren’t thickly keratinized. It’s applied at bedtime three times per week. Imiquimod can be used alternately with a topical retinoid such as tazarotene, which may increase effectiveness.
Occlusion may be beneficial to persistent warts.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Warts:
Warts - TREATMENT
(The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult)
When to expect improvement:
- Spontaneous resolution has been observed in common, flat, genital, and plantar warts. In healthy individuals, 75% of warts regress without treatment within 3 years.
- Any therapy and its side effects must be measured against the high rate of resolution without intervention.
- With the various treatment modalities, a response is generally seen within weeks to several months.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: The 5-Minute Pediatric Consult, 2008
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