Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (2024)

Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (1)

Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (2)What is a plantar wart?

Warts are small, rough, thick and often painful lumps on the skin that are caused by a virus called the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). When a wart is present on the bottom of your foot, it’s called a plantar wart.

What causes plantar warts?

Plantar warts are spread through direct contact – either with someone that has the virus, or from sharing floors, shoes and socks with someone who has the virus. This means warts can quickly spread through families if care is not taken. Once you have the virus, it will be in your system for life, even if you don’t have any warts currently showing. As the virus is highly contagious, it’s important to seek plantar wart treatment early.

While plantar warts can affect anyone of any age, they tend to be more common in children. This is thought to be because their immune system hasn’t reached full maturity. My FootDr offers a variety of plantar wart treatments that are suitable for all ages and pain tolerance levels.

Plantar wart symptoms

Plantar warts are not usually a serious health concern. They can, however, cause extreme pain and discomfort if they arise in high weight-bearing areas, like beneath your heel, the ball of your foot or your toes. This can make running, jumping and even walking uncomfortable, as the thick wart presses inwards on the sensitive nerves of the skin. The tenderness can make us change the way we walk to avoid the pain, and cause strain elsewhere in the body. A little wart can be a big problem. If pain persists, contact a My FootDr podiatrist to undergo plantar wart treatment.

Is it a wart or a corn?

Warts and corns can look very similar on first glance, leading many health professionals and those trying to treat the problem at home to make the wrong diagnosis. As warts and corns have completely different treatment requirements, we highly recommend saving yourself time and money treating the wrong problem, and having a Podiatrist diagnose the cause of your pain.

Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (3)If you have a wart, the top layer of callus that often overlies the wart must be removed. Before thishappens, you cannot confidently differentiate the two – this is where we see many people go wrong. If the mass beneath is a wart, you will notice:

  • A rougher, granular appearance in the wart tissue
  • Pain when pinching the wart
  • Little black dots (dried blood) in the wart tissue
  • Bleeding when the top of the wart or overlying callus is removed
  • The natural lines in your skin move around the wart, and not through it

Treating plantar warts

Warning: We strongly advise against using home-care wart pads or creams from the chemist. These solutions almost always contain acid or other keratolytic ingredients to ‘eat away’ and dissolve the wart tissue. We often see patients who have used this unsuccessfully and have had the acid affect the healthy, thin surrounding skin. This causes an extremely painful injury, often producing much more pain than the wart itself, and leaves your fragile skin vulnerable to infection while it repairs.

At My FootDr, we offer plantar wart treatments to suit all ages and pain tolerance levels. This includes:

  • Using a mild acid in a safe and controlled environment, applied by an experienced Podiatrist. This usually requires multiple applications over several weeks and removes the viral cells slowly, allowing healthy skin cells to replace them.
  • Cryotherapyto freeze warts using liquid nitrogen. We often use this treatment together with other treatments to maximise the effects.

Surgical plantar wart removal is usually not recommended to treat plantar warts because it can cause painful scarring.

Plantar warts can resolve on their own, though the timing is highly unpredictable with some warts taking weeks and other being present for years. If your wart is causing you pain, discomfort, or is affecting the way you walk, we highly recommend having it treated.

Preventing plantar warts

Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (4)The following tips may help to prevent plantar warts:

  • Avoid walking barefoot in public changing rooms and showers
  • Change your shoes and socks daily
  • Keep your feet clean and dry
  • Check your children’s feet periodically, and treat any warts before they spread to other members of the family
  • Avoid direct contact with warts on other persons or on other parts of the body
  • Do not ignore growths on, or changes in, your skin
  • Visit a podiatrist immediately if you notice any lumps or sores on the foot

Plantar Wart FAQs

How do you get rid of plantar warts?

Consult your My FootDr podiatrist for any plantar wart removal. We often recommend using mild acid delivered by an experienced podiatrist, or cryotherapy to freeze the wart off using liquid nitrogen.

Are plantar warts contagious?

Yes, they are. They’re spread through direct and in-direct contact with a person who has Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). It is important to seek treatment as soon as you detect a plantar wart.

Can I walk after plantar wart removal?

If surgically removing a plantar wart, it is suggested that you don’t put any pressure on your foot for 1-2days and keep the area bandages.

How deep can a plantar wart grow?

Plantar warts grow deep within the skin before showing symptoms like thickened skin, pain and tiny black dots. You can discover how deep your plantar wart is by undergoing treatment with your podiatrist.

How do you stop plantar warts from coming back?

There is no guaranteed cure for plantar warts that will completely stop them from returning, as the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) that causes the warts live in your body forever. However, you can prevent the spread by not scratching these warts or touching other parts of your body with them. If plantar warts return, continue with your treatment, or consult your doctor to explore another treatment option.

What happens to a plantar wart if left untreated?

If left untreated, a plantar wart can continue to grow and spread to various parts of your body and infect others that come in contact with you. Besides it being important to manage the spread of the virus, it’s also important for your personal health to treat your plantar wart as soon as possible. Plantar warts can become painful if untreated and effect the way you stand, walk and run. In some cases, this may cause muscle or joint discomfort.

Can plantar warts be surgically removed?

Yes, plantar warts can be surgically removed. However, this method of removal is often not recommended as surgery can cause painful scarring.

Are plantar warts contagious after treatment?

Plantar warts can still be contagious in-between treatments, and so it is important to keep them covered as to not infect anyone through direct and indirect content. Once the plantar wart has completely disappeared, the skin in the area will not be contagious. However, it is still important to keep an eye out for the early signs of developing warts around your body, in case another area has been infected.

How long for plantar warts to heal after acid treatment?

After receiving your first acid treatment from your podiatrist, it may take several sessions before your plantar wart is fully removed.

Plantar Warts Symptoms & Treatment – My FootDr (2024)

FAQs

What is the fastest way to get rid of a plantar wart? ›

Cryotherapy. One of the most commonly used plantar wart removal methods involves freezing them off, a procedure known as cryotherapy. To freeze plantar warts, your healthcare provider will swab or spray liquid nitrogen onto the wart and a small area surrounding the wart.

How do podiatrists get rid of plantar warts? ›

The podiatrist would debride away wart tissue to expose blood supply and then apply silver nitrate to the wart tissue. The debridement and chemical application cause tissue trauma in attempt to kick start the body's immune system into action.

What happens if you leave plantar warts for too long? ›

Besides it being important to manage the spread of the virus, it's also important for your personal health to treat your plantar wart as soon as possible. Plantar warts can become painful if untreated and effect the way you stand, walk and run. In some cases, this may cause muscle or joint discomfort.

What makes plantar warts worse? ›

Plantar warts are most common on the parts of the foot that receive the most pressure when you're standing or walking. Since those are two things you can't avoid, additional standing and walking increase the pressure on the wart and send it further inward, deep into your skin.

What draws out plantar warts? ›

Many people have removed warts with these self-care tips: Peeling medicine (salicylic acid). Nonprescription wart removal products are sold as a patch, gel or liquid. You'll likely be instructed to wash the site, soak it in warm water, and gently remove the top layer of softened skin with a pumice stone or emery board.

What not to do with plantar warts? ›

Avoid high heels or shoes that put a lot of pressure on your foot. Pad the wart with doughnut-shaped felt or a moleskin patch. You can buy these at a drugstore.

How do I know when a plantar wart is completely killed? ›

One needs to keep going down until just below the level of the surrounding skin to eradicate a wart completely. Stop when the base of the wart looks exactly like normal skin (i.e. no black dots or 'graininess). If they become sore or bleed a little just leave off the treatment and carry on the following night.

Do I have to throw away shoes after getting a wart? ›

During and after treatment for plantar warts it is important to always wear clean, dry shoes, socks, panty hose, and the like. Also remember that old footwear items must either be thoroughly sanitized or discarded or else re-infection is likely to occur.

Is it OK to cut out a plantar wart? ›

Conventional treatment focuses on removal, while alternative approaches emphasize gradual remission. Whatever you do, do not try to cut off a plantar wart yourself because you may injure yourself and cuts in your skin allow the warts to spread.

What happens if you pick a plantar wart? ›

People with plantar warts can auto-inoculate HPV and spread infection to other parts of the body. For example, picking at warts with fingernails may result in transference of infection to the hands.

Why does duct tape work on warts? ›

One theory is that the tape deprives the skin cells of oxygen. By “suffocating” the wart, the duct tape makes it more likely that the skin cells will die. The process of applying and removing the duct tape may also remove additional skin cells, which can make the wart less bulky and noticeable.

What is the lifespan of a plantar wart? ›

Most often, warts are harmless growths that go away on their own within 2 years. Periungual or plantar warts are harder to cure than warts in other places. Warts can come back after treatment, even if they appear to go away. Minor scars can form after warts are removed.

Can you pull out a plantar wart? ›

Can you pull out a plantar wart? Yes, you can pull out a plantar wart. They do tend to bleed a lot due to an increased nerve and vascular supply. Many times they do return, but with any type of injury, the body's immune response will respond to the wart tissue.

What is the strongest wart remover? ›

Bleomycin: Bleomycin is an anti-cancer medication that a doctor injects into the wart. It can have side effects, such as loss of the nails if treating a wart on the finger.

Does soaking in Epsom salt help plantar warts? ›

For example, ingrown toenails can be treated by soaking your feet in warm water mixed with Epsom salt for twenty minutes. Bunions can be fixed using toe spacers, but some may need surgical removal. Plantar warts can usually be treated by soaking the foot to soften the wart.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Moshe Kshlerin

Last Updated:

Views: 6749

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Moshe Kshlerin

Birthday: 1994-01-25

Address: Suite 609 315 Lupita Unions, Ronnieburgh, MI 62697

Phone: +2424755286529

Job: District Education Designer

Hobby: Yoga, Gunsmithing, Singing, 3D printing, Nordic skating, Soapmaking, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Moshe Kshlerin, I am a gleaming, attractive, outstanding, pleasant, delightful, outstanding, famous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.