Duct Tape Can Get Rid of Warts
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - The next time you're
in need of a wart cure-all, forget combing the aisles of the local
pharmacy and head over to the hardware store instead.
According to the findings of a small study in children, applying
plain old duct tape to the common wart (scientifically known as
Verruca vulgaris) appears to be superior to traditional cryotherapy
with liquid nitrogen.
While anecdotal reports
abound of duct tape's wart-removing abilities, the therapy has
not gone head-to-head with other wart removal techniques, according
to the report published in the October issue of the Archives of
Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine.
In the current study,
the researchers compared duct tape therapy to cryotherapy, which
involves several visits to the doctor's office. During the treatment,
a physician freezes the wart by applying a quick, narrow blast
of liquid nitrogen to the offending blemish. This is repeated
once every two or three weeks until the wart is gone.
Aside from the inconvenience
of frequent visits to the doctor's office, another potential drawback
to this method is that many children are afraid of the treatment
and may find it painful, according to lead author Dr. Dean R.
Focht III, who conducted the study with colleagues Dr. Mary Fairchok
and Carole Spicer while at the Madigan Army Medical Center in
Tacoma, Washington.
"Tape occlusion, if proven
effective, could be an inexpensive, convenient and painless alternative
to cryotherapy in the treatment of pediatric warts," they write.
Focht is now at the Children's Hospital Medical Center in Cincinnati.
In the study, the researchers
randomly assigned 51 patients between the ages of 3 and 22 to
receive either a maximum of 6 cryotherapy treatments, once every
two to three weeks, or two months of duct tape therapy.
In duct tape therapy,
a nurse covered the wart with a piece of duct tape roughly the
same size as the wart. Patients (or their parents) were instructed
to keep the duct tape on for 6 consecutive days and if the tape
peeled off during that time, apply another at home.
At the end of 6 days,
patients soaked the wart in water and rubbed it with an emery
board or pumice stone. The next morning a new piece of tape was
applied. The routine was repeated for a maximum of two months.
During the study, all
of the patients returned frequently to the doctor's office to
have their warts measured and evaluated by a nurse.
The investigators found
that 85% of those in the duct tape group, compared to 60% of those
in the cryotherapy group "had complete resolution of their warts.
"This study shows that
duct tape occlusion therapy is not only equal to but exceeds the
efficacy of cryotherapy in the treatment of the common wart. Tape
occlusion therapy can now be offered as a nonthreatening, painless,
and inexpensive technique for the treatment of warts in children,"
according to the report.
It's not clear exactly
how the duct tape sends warts packing, according to the report,
"but, as with other therapies, it may involve stimulation of the
patient's immune system through local irritation."
SOURCE: Archives of Pediatric
and Adolescent Medicine 2002;156:971-974.
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