Does wart treatment (such as freezing) kill the wart or only triger the bodies natural immune reaction?
I’ve heard competing claims about (plantar) wart treatment. Some doctors say freezing it with liquid nitrogen is to kill the wart, while trying to minimize the damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Other doctors say it is just to irritate the body enough to stimulate the natural immune system response, and that’s what gets rid of the wart. Can the body’s own immune system be enough to get rid of the wart?
The wikipedia article has a small note, in a confusing section, that reads
  This last point implies that in the case of plantar warts it was
  likely the patients own immune system responsible for resolution and
  not the specific treatment.
To me this sounds like scientists don't really know which it is?
1 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
It does both.
The center of the wart is weakened/killed with the acid/nitrogen(cold), while the periphery is damaged (both the wart and the skin around it).
Because the wart is weakened, the body's natural reparation process slowly replaces the missing skin (under and around the wart) faster than the wart can grow, while the immune system prevents it from spreading within the area.
Eventually what remains of the wart will get exfoliated (fall off) the same way as old skin, leaving behind healthy skin with no warts.
More info about the treatments: Plantar Warts Diagnosis & Treatment.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © freshhoot.com2025 All Rights reserved.