Warts: Using Salicylic Acid
Topic Overview
Salicylic acid is available
as a paint, cream, plaster, tape, or patch that you put on the wart. Be sure to
read and follow the instructions that come with the medicine,
or follow your doctor's instructions. Salicylic acid may take weeks to months
to cure a wart.
For best results:
- Before applying salicylic acid, soak the wart
in water to help loosen and soften skin. This helps the medicine penetrate the
skin more easily.
- Apply salicylic acid to the wart when you go to
bed. Cover the area with a bandage or sock, and wash off the medicine in the
morning.
- Avoid getting salicylic acid on your unaffected skin.
Salicylic acid should touch only the wart.
- With repeated
application, salicylic acid causes the wart tissue to become soft so that it
can be rubbed off easily.
- Remove dead tissue daily or once or twice
a week with careful use of a file or pumice stone or as instructed on the
medicine package. Dead tissue contains living wart virus, so dispose of the
dead skin carefully. The pumice stone or file will also have living wart virus
on it. Don't use the file or pumice stone for any other purpose, or you may
spread the virus.
- If treatment causes the area to become too
tender, stop using the medicine for 2 to 3 days.
Credits
|
By
|
Healthwise Staff |
|
Primary Medical Reviewer
|
Patrice Burgess, MD - Family Medicine |
|
Specialist Medical Reviewer
|
E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine |
|
Last Revised
|
April 12, 2012 |
Last Revised:
April 12, 2012