Planter Wart Removal
Planter Wart Removal: All About Tina Campbell
July 26, 2008 on 1:14 pm | In General | No CommentsBefore I get into this all natural method of planter wart removal, I’d like to tell you a little bit about myself. My name is Tina Campbell, I’m 50 years old, african american, I have no children, I went to college at one time and these days I make about $30,000 a year.
The reason I tell you all of this is that I’m no one special. The only reason I decided to put up this website and offer these planter wart removal methods is because everyone on the forums were demanding it.
What Im trying to say is this, Im just a regular person and being in the “spotlight” like this freaks me out abit.
Like me, many of the people reading this site probably have endured painful planter warts for many years before finding a solution. I was just lucky enough to a “fall into” a number of painless solutions to those uncomfortable warts.
Now, Im not perfect, there are tons of things that I know nothing about. But when it comes to painless planter wart removal, I know a thing or two. I have decided to put this website together as a favor to some internet friends who needed the advice here. I suppose if no one is interested in this information I’ll just take the site down, but I think you might find some of this knowledge very powerful in your planter wart removal battle.
Now you basically have two options, you can try the planter wart removal that uses a hypnosis mp3 or you can use a natural remedy to take care of the critters. There is no doubt in my mind that you will one day look back at this moment as being the beginning of a wart free YOU. Use either one of these methods with my blessing.
Tina Campbell
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No related postsplanters wart removal by doctor Mark T. Senft
July 25, 2008 on 10:53 am | In Videos From Youtube | No Comments
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No related postsWarts And Planter Wart Removal Methods
July 25, 2008 on 10:20 am | In General | 1 CommentWarts are small, usually harmless and painless growths on the skin caused by a virus. The virus is called human papillomavirus (HPV) that resides in the bottom layer of the skin. Different sub-types of HPV cause different kinds of planter warts.
People of all ages, but most commonly children and young adults, are prone to getting planter warts. They are spread by direct contact, simply by touching the wart. Warts can sometimes be contagious, but transmission from person to person is uncommon. However, planter warts can be embarrassing and disfiguring, and sometimes itch and hurt.
There are different types of planter warts. Common planter warts usually appear on the hands, and flat planter warts are found on the face and forehead. Genital planter warts are found on the genitals; plantar planter warts on the soles of the feet, and subungual planter warts and periungual planter warts appear under and around the finger nails or toe nails.
While some planter warts cause no discomfort, some are difficult to treat, some disappear without treatment and others do require treatment.
In some cases, over-the-counter medication can remove planter warts. The medication is applied to the planter warts daily for several weeks. For plantar planter warts that are found on the soles of the feet, special cushions are available at drugstores. These are pads that help relieve any pressure and pain from the planter warts. For the removal of persistent planter warts, prescription medication may be required such as surgical removal or removal by freezing, burning or laser treatment.
Freezing, which is also known as Cryotherapy, is a method by which liquid nitrogen is applied either as a spray or on a cotton swab to the wart which freezes and kills the effected cells. Although the lesion heals without significant scarring, a blister does form on the area. If the wart is on the foot, this kind of treatment is not the first choice, because it becomes very painful to walk. Another option is Immunotherapy which triggers the immune system to destroy the virus that causes the wart. However, since the substances used are expensive, sometimes dangerous and require special handling, they are used as a last resort when all other options fail.
Most wart treatments are successful and the planter warts disappear for good. The body’s immune system also gets rid of any tiny bits of wart that might be left behind. In some cases, should the planter warts come back, it is best to seek medical advice on other ways of treating them. Planter Warts
This delighful video shows a doctor performing the freezing method of planter wart removal. I have to say that I never had any success with this method. Even after all the pain of the freezing and susiquent healing, they would always come back with a vengence. Nevertheless I thought I would add this video for everyones enjoyment and education.
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No related postsPlanter Wart Removal – Is there really a way to remove warts safely?
July 24, 2008 on 2:12 pm | In General | 1 CommentFreezing, harsh chemicals and surgery can all be used for wart removal. Yet some patients prefer

to get a more planter 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 planter wart removal.
To appreciate one approach to planter 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 planter 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 planter 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 planter wart removal? Harsh chemicals irritate the skin. Treatment of the skin with such harsh chemicals is not viewed as a type of planter 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 planter wart removal.
Can extreme temperatures be viewed as a type of planter 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 planter wart removal.
Maybe an old game could be used as a type of planter 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 planter 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 planter wart removal needs to kill that virus.
If a planter 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 planter wart removal.
The use of an ineffective planter 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 planter 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 planter wart removal does not act quickly, it can give a virus a better chance to produce a cancerous growth.
A planter wart removal can look like the safest way to be rid of an unsightly wart. The seeming advantages of a planter 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.
I’m James Mann for a long time I suffered through warts, and figured there was an easier way to get rid of them. For More information feel free to visit the wart removal site by CLICKING HERE
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No related postsPlacebos And Planter Wart Removal
July 21, 2008 on 1:52 pm | In General | No CommentsWhy Placebos are the Best For Planter Wart Removal!
For anyone who has ever experienced the discomfort of planter warts, what is most troublesome is determining the best, easiest and least painful method of removal. There are countless methods that have been created to remedy planter warts of the feet and hands, however many of these simply do not work 100% of the time. From ineffective medical procedures like freezing, burning, acid, and cutting to more effective and practical treatments such as clinical hypnotism, affirmations and visualization. This article aims to inform the reader on some of the many treatments that are statically ineffective and extremely painful, as well as introduce some other methods of treatment that are painless, natural and easy to use, and beneficial.
Medical text book commonly state that there is no one common treatment that is 100% effective for removing planter warts. The average success rate of curing for any method practiced by medical professionals is roughly 27%. The most comprehensive medical review you can find online was conducted by the American Family Physicians association and it states that various placebo methods had more then a 73% effective success rate. Before we discuss what methods they found that worked, let’s discuss some of the less then effective methods currently being used to cure planter warts.
The main method of removing warts from a Pharmacological point of view is acid treatments. A number of chemicals called keratolytic chemicals have been in use for many years now. This is despite their ineffectiveness and even despite the fact that they often damage the surrounding skin around planter warts, allowing them to grow bigger then before the treatment. Trichloroacetic acid and salicylic acid are the most common types that can be purchased at drug stores all across North America. It is recommended that you avoid using any of these methods as they are unable to treat the root of the problem.
In order to kill the planter wart virus, medical professionals developed a form of chemotherapy. This involves placing a gel that contains glutaraldehyde on the surface of the planter wart or even injecting it directly into the wart. These methods tent to be very painful, and for reasons that are not quit completely understood, the warts most often return stronger then before, leavening the patient off worse then when they started. This treatment was later replaced with two surgical procedures.
Liquid nitrogen and lasers were believed to be effective treatments. The liquid nitrogen would be applied to the planter wart surface with a swab and held for a number of seconds. This would kill all the cells on the surface and often the surrounding skin cells as well. The problem with this method was that it wasn’t able to treat the root of the wart, where all the growth came from. The same is true of the lasers that would be used to systematically burn layers away from the planter wart in an attempt to prevent growth. Sometimes this method is effective, however it often left major burning scars when the skin returned to it original state. Liquid nitrogen and laser treatments are next to useless for one simple reason.
It is common knowledge that a planter wart is a virus, it forms a body of it’s own in the skin, and attaches to the veins to get its energy. The blood supply to the wart is what keeps it alive. Many of the ineffective methods of planter wart treatment are unable to stop the supply of blood to the wart, allowing it to continue thriving. What is not so well known is that a persons dominant thoughts can affect the flow of blood to any part of the body. For example, when a person visits a hypnotist to remedy a wart, a competent hypno-therapist is able to relax the patient, and give them positive suggestions that will actually affect the blood supply to the wart, forcing it to crumble away after a few days, leaving fresh pink skin. When visualization is used as a treatment, the subconscious mind is empowered to actually slow down the blood flow to the wart, starving it until dies away. In the same way that suggestion, affirmation and visualization can affect the blood flow and kill the planter wart, the placebo affect can accomplish the exact same thing. This explains why magical remedies have been used as a cure for generations.
Despite the fact that many of the common medical treatments for planter warts have been statistically proven to be ineffective on the great majority of people, it is quit clear that when a suggestion by a doctor results in the placebo affect the desired effect occurs. This means that 7 out of 10 times a planter wart cure is found, it has been the result of the placebo effect. So if you have seen your doctor and received an acid treatment, freezing or laser cures and you are unsuccessful, you should look into an alternative remedy that forces your subconscious mind to do the work for you. This way of curing planter warts is not only less painful, but it is also much less stressful on your mind and body and you will amaze yourself at how powerful the healer within you can be.
Peter Hill is a writer who specializes in health and fitness. He runs an informational website that provides videos, articles, links and tips for removing planter warts. For more information be sure to check out his site at http://PlantarWartCure.blogspot.com
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No related postsA Story About Treatment: Planter Wart Removal
July 21, 2008 on 1:44 pm | In General | 1 CommentThe Painless Planter Wart Removal – A Story
By Peter Hill
If you have ever experienced planter warts then you know that they are painful and often difficult to remove. For a number of years I had them on my feet and endured the discomfort of trying various planter wart treatments and remedies that simply didn’t work. From getting the virus in a public shower, the failed treatments from my doctor, to the breakthrough I had when I downloaded a self-hypnosis mp3 online. This article will tell my story of how I went from having feet covered in warts and feeling helpless, to curing the warts painlessly.
In 2001 I was traveling around Ontario Canada when I got my first planter wart on my right foot. I traced it back to using a public shower without sandals. A few days later a small planter wart had formed on the bottom on my heel and for the next 5 years I would be trying in vain to remove the little critter as it spread to different parts of my feet and eventually my hand. In the early days, I wasn’t even aware of the fact that it was a wart, and I tried all sorts of things to remove it myself. It wasn’t until years later that I was able to diagnose exactly what it was I was dealing with let along seek professional help.
When I first learned that I had a virus in my foot, I immediately started searching for a planter wart cure or sorts. My journey began at Shoppers Drug Mart, where I one by one, bought every single product they had for removing planter warts. I used the acids, the freezing, then gel patches, only to find that they left me worse off then before. I went to my doctor who used freezing directly on the wart more then half a dozen times, and eventually a more powerful acid all with no results and a ton of severe pain. I used tuck tape to cover the planter wart for an entire summer only to find that they stayed exactly the same. There was a homeopathic expert who suggested I drink a juice that tasted like pine needles, tea tree oil and a strange cream all with no success. I spent a lot of money, a few hundred dollars and began to feel very helpless. It seemed that I had tried every planter wart remedy on the fact of the planet, I was getting to the point where I would try anything at all, as long as there was a possibility that it would successful.
While doing research on the Internet, I came across a report from a research study conducted by the University of British Columbia that suggested that all the current planter wart treatments used by medical professionals were not as successful as placebo treatments and hypnosis treatments that professional hypnotists perform. This research led me to even more information on the subject and I eventually found a web site where I could download an mp3 of an hypnotic induction done by a man called Mark Tyrrel. It was a short audio file about 20 minutes in length and it guided me through a number of positive suggestions that deeply relaxed my body helped give me a feeling of well-being. I continued listening to the mp3 every day for the rest of the wee, I listed every other day the next week and eventually stopped listening. The results were incredible and I noticed how my warts began to slowly die and crumble away. By the third week some of my warts were replaced with fresh pink skin and all the pain and discomfort had gone away. It definitely changed the way I think about hypnotism and especially about the body’s ability to heal itself though the power of suggestion.
For me, finding an effective planter wart cure was a long and difficult journey. I learned many things, and I learned that you can’t always trust the experts when it comes to something as important as your health. From how I learned to avoid planter warts, how I learned of countless remedies that were basically ineffective and how I eventually removed the warts for good by taking the advice of world class hypnotist. In looking back, it almost seems silly that the most painless method of planter wart treatment was the most successful and the easiest to do.
Peter Hill is a writer who specializes in health and fitness. He runs an informational website that provides videos, articles, links and tips for removing planter warts. For more information be sure to check out his site at http://planterwartcure.blogspot.com/2007/06/hypnosis-as-wart-treatment.html
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No related postsPlanter Wart Cure – What Treatments Are Used To Remove Warts?
July 21, 2008 on 1:41 pm | In General | No CommentsPlantar warts are the skin growths, which most commonly develop beneath pressure points in your feet, like soles, heels or balls of the feet. They are caused when human papilloma virus (HPV) enters the blood stream either through small cuts or cracks in the skin.
Often times no treatment is required. They often go away by their own with time. But some of them may cause serious complications. If left untreated, planter warts may become cancerous after some time.
Plantar warts can spread to the other areas of the body, as they are highly contagious. In order to prevent them from spreading, they should be treated. They are quite irritating, painful and difficult to walk with. So they must be removed.
There is as such no planter wart cure, but it can be achieved by various treatment options. The treatment options include use of mild acids, duct tapes, cryotherapy, laser treatment etc.
The most commonly used treatment for planter warts is the use of mild acids like salicylic acid, cantharidin and dichloroacetic acid. These acids are applied topically over the planter warts. Application of these acids over planter warts for several weeks may help as a treatment.
Duct tape can also help. The tape is applied over the planter warts and they are left for six days. After six days, the affected area is washed and the dead skin is removed by rubbing it gently with a nail filer or pumice stone. This type of cure may take up to 8 weeks.
A cure can also be achieved with the help of cryotherapy. In this treatment the planter warts are froze with the help of cold solution like sodium nitride. The planter warts turn black initially and fall off after few days.
Another treatment widely used is the laser treatment. This planter wart treatment uses CO2 lasers to kill the virus. This treatment is expensive and painful and may leave a scar behind.
Debridement is another type of treatment used. It is used only when large numbers of planter warts are present in a particular area. It involves cutting off the warts with a scalpel. This treatment is usually not used as a cure as it produces scarring and is quite painful.
A surgical procedure named electrodessication is also used as a planter warts cure. It involves cutting away the wart by using an electric needle. This treatment is quite effective but leaves a scar on the foot.
There are various types of over the counter medications available. But these medications are not prescribed as they contain harmful chemicals, which not only destroy skin cells but also damage the normal healthy skin around the planter wart.
Your doctor may use any of the above-mentioned treatments depending upon the type of wart and your tolerance level. He will always start up with over the counter treatments and if they fail, he will move to other treatments.
Peter Hill is a writer who specializes in health and fitness. He runs an informational website that provides videos, articles, links and tips for removing planter warts. For more information on Plantar Wart Treatments be sure to check out his site at http://www.PlantarWartCure.blogspot.com
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No related postsRemoving Planter Warts
July 21, 2008 on 1:37 pm | In General | No CommentsMost of the planter warts are not dangerous. They often go away by their own. But it’s better to remove it. One of the reasons for removing planter warts is that they are contagious. That means they can spread from one part of the body to the other. And another reason is that they may be painful and troublesome and even uncomfortable to walk with.
But removing planter warts is not an easy task. This happens because most of the times they are fully developed even before you think of removing them. Another reason is that they usually grow in clusters and inward.
There are many over the counter ways of removing planter warts. Most of the time these methods work but take some time. But don’t ever try them if you have diabetes. If you are diabetic you should go straightaway and consult your doctor.
The most common method of removing warts is the use of salicylic acid. Salicylic acid is easily available at any nearby medical store. Salicylic acid should be applied either as a solution or a patch over the planter wart daily. After the application of acid, remove the dead skin from the planter wart either by using a nail filer or pumice stone.
The application of acid kills the viral cells and promotes the growth of new healthy skin cells. You have to repeat this process for about 3-4 weeks for complete elimination of warts. This method of removing planter warts may take several weeks to show it’s effect but it is highly successful.
Another method of removing planter warts is the use of duct tapes. Apply the duct tape over the wart and keep it there for about six days. After six days, wash off the wart and gently rub it with a nail filer or pumice stone to remove the dead skin. Repeat the process for about 6 weeks or till the planter wart goes away. This method of removing warts can also be used in combination with salicylic acid treatment.
One more method that is used over years for removing planter warts is placing the foot in freezing cold water for 10-15 minutes. This method may kill the viral cells and make the wart soft enough to be removed with a nail filer or a pumice stone.
If all the above over the counter methods fail, then it is advisable to visit your health care provider. He may suggest some clinical treatment options for removing planter warts like Laser treatment, Cryotherapy, Immunotherapy and Surgery.
For a natural remedy, hypnosis has a long and successfully track record as a painless planter wart treatment. You can visit a licensed hypnotherapist or download a professionally recorded hypnosis sessions in mp3 format onto your computer. Just make sure to repeat the session every day for a week, and every other day for the second week.
Peter Hill is a writer who specializes in health and fitness. He runs an informational website that provides videos, articles, links and tips for removing planter warts. For more information on removing planter warts be sure to check out his site at http://www.PlantarWartCure.blogspot.com
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No related posts11 Planter Wart Removal Techniques That Might Work
July 18, 2008 on 12:43 pm | In General | No CommentsRead this article to know the best Home Remedies for Warts. First of all let me tell you what are Warts?
Warts are small, skin-colored, coarse lumps on the skin. Warts are caused by virus called human papilloma virus (HPV). Warts are generally harmless, but they can look nasty.
Warts are not painful, although verrucas can sometimes hurt. Warts normally take place on the hands or fingers or near the fingernails. Warts normally appear gradually and are generally painless.
Warts possibly are passed from person to person, sometimes not directly. Warts often vanish without treatment over a period of several months to years. Warts will treat on their own, given long sufficient, but this may take years. Warts are identified by their appearance during a physical examination. Warts are treated with ways that destroy the wart.
Here is a list of some best Home Remedies for Warts:
Home Remedies for Warts:
1) Fresh Aloe vera juice is applied straightly to dissolve warts and tone the skin.
2) The fresh plant, sap (figs) or concentrate (papain) can be applied; any of these can be taped to the skin for numerous hours. Apply the juice from fig stems and leaves to the warts as this acts as good Home Remedy for Warts.
3) Milkweed a weed that is found normally in North America; the fresh milky sap of the leaf or stem is applied straightly to warts once a day.
4) Onions are also useful in warts. They are irritating to the skin and rouse the circulation of the blood. Warts occasionally disappear when rubbed with cut onions.
5) The herb Indian squill is helpful in removing warts. A powder of the bulb of this herb should be applied locally over the affected area for superior results. This is one of the good Home Remedy for Warts.
6) The herb dandelion is valuable Home Remedy for Warts. The milk from the cut end of dandelion should be applied over the infected area two or three time’s daily.
7) The oil removed from the shell of the cashew nut is also useful in warts as it is a powerful irritant to the skin. It should be applied outwardly over the affected area in treating this state.
Marigold is another herb found beneficial in the warts removal. The juice of the leaves of this plant can be applied over warts. The sap from the stem has also been found useful in the removal of warts. This is another effective Home Remedy for Warts.
9) Apply fresh cut pineapple to affected areas several times daily.
10) Raw potatoes are also helpful in the treatment of warts. A potato should be cut and massaged on the affected area several times daily. This should be repeated for at least two weeks for warts removal. This is also effective Home Remedy for Warts.
11) Rub crushed garlic on the wart 2-3 times daily until the wart fades away in 3-4 weeks. You can also crush a garlic clove so it is pulpy and moist. Cover the wart with this pulp. Leave it for overnight. Wart will begin disappearing from the first night.
Or you can get to the root of the problem with Hypnosis Planter Wart Removal or Natural Remedies!
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No related postsCommon Types Of Planter Warts And How To Remove Them
July 18, 2008 on 10:49 am | In General | No Commentswarts – The Various Types And How They Are Treated
warts are small rough lumps on the skin, and contrary to myth, they are not caused by touching, holding, or kissing a toad. warts are caused by a viral infection in the outer skin layer called the Human Papillomavirus (HPV). They are a common skin condition that can affect virtually any part of the body.
warts are most often transmitted from person-to-person contact. They are easy to identify and are most common on the hands and feet, however some can affect the face and other parts of the body. warts are more common in children than in adults, although they can develop at any age.
Most warts will usually heal themselves within weeks or months, but some warts may take years to go away. This all depends on the immune system of the individual. Most warts are harmless; however they can be quite bothersome. warts are also unattractive and embarrassing.
There are four main types of warts: common, flat, plantar and genital.
Common warts are rough, grayish brown dome-shaped growths that appear mostly on the hands; however they may appear elsewhere on the body.
Flat warts are usually found on the face, arms, or legs. These warts are named according to their physical description – they are flat on top and can be either pink, light brown or yellow in color.
Plantar warts are warts that appear on the soles, or plantar surface, of your feet. They are irritating and can feel like you have a permanent pebble in your shoe.
Genital warts are single or multiple lumps that appear on or around the genital area and are highly contagious. They have an irregular cauliflower-like surface. Genital warts are the most common symptoms of the Human Papilloma Virus.
Treatments For warts:
There are various types of treatments available for warts. These treatments depend on the location of the warts, the age of the individual, and how long the warts have been present.
Over the counter treatments typically need several applications, and are only necessary if the warts are problematic. More extensive external warts are frequently treated directly with a variety of topical or surgical treatments. The warts are excised or cut off from the skin at the base.
Most warts are often cleared by the body without any treatment; however they can be treated depending on your individual symptoms and personal preferences. If you have warts that are rapidly multiplying then they should be treated. For the most part, warts are not usually all that serious a problem.
By: Susan Fielding -
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You can find more information on warts-info.info/sitemap.html">warts and wart treatments at the warts-help.info">warts resource website.

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