Thursday, May 12, 2011

Wart removal - Is there really a way to remove warts safely


Freezing, harsh chemicals and surgery can all be used for wart removal. Yet some patients prefer to get a more natural wart removal. Failure to choose wisely, when selecting a place for the banishment of an annoying wart can lead to complications. Such complications seem to underline the advantages of natural wart removal.To appreciate one approach to natural wart removal, one must picture the needs of regenerating skin cells. When you get a cut, you need to have regenerating skin cells. Heavily bandaged cells tend to regenerate very slowly. That fact suggests the basis of a natural wart removal.The cells in a wart, like regenerating cells, are dividing and growing. If those cells are covered by some sort of material, they are apt to die. That is the basis of one form of natural wart removal. The wart is covered with duct tape. The cells in the ward die.





Can a chemical that kills cells be put in the category of natural wart removal? Harsh chemicals irritate the skin. Treatment of the skin with such harsh chemicals is not viewed as a type of natural wart removal. Yet certain healing professionals have discovered less harsh chemicals, chemicals that inhibit cell growth. Some of those chemicals have been used in medicines that draw praise for their ability to permit natural wart removal.Can extreme temperatures be viewed as a type of natural wart removal? A person seldom wants to expose his or her skin to boiling or freezing temperatures. Cryosurgery kills cells by freezing them, but cryosurgery on the skin requires the use of a cell-numbing chemical. That fact raises doubts about the correctness of allowing cell freezing to go in the category labeled natural wart removal. Maybe an old game could be used as a type of natural wart removal. Some children thrill others by passing their finger through a flame. Perhaps a wart on a finger could be removed in that manner. Someone would first need to see how many passages through a flame were needed in order to kill the cells in the wart.Anyone contemplating a form of natural wart removal should first study the nature of a wart. A wart is caused by a virus.





The virus gets into some skin cells. The virus affects the growth properties of those skin cells. An effective natural wart removal needs to kill that virus.If a natural wart removal does not prove effective, the virus continues to disrupt the growth characteristics of the infected cells. Eventually those skin cells could invade a different region of the body. That possibility underlines the potential danger in a less than effective natural wart removal.The use of an ineffective natural wart removal can invite unpleasant problems, if the wart was in a private region of the body. An improperly treated wart could allow the virus to spread to a reproductive duct. As a result, the young man or woman who experimented with the natural wart removal might loose the ability to carry-out the normal reproductive functions.The virus that causes a wart can produce yet a second group of unwanted symptoms. A virus that causes a wart might have the ability to cause the development of a malignancy. If a natural wart removal does not act quickly, it can give a virus a better chance to produce a cancerous growth.A natural wart removal can look like the safest way to be rid of an unsightly wart. The seeming advantages of a natural wart removal can hide the potential dangers in a too lengthy treatment. A treatment that takes too long gives the wart-causing virus an added opportunity to either spread or to produce a malignancy.


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