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Cantharidin for wart treatment
Examples
Cantharidin is a chemical derived from the green blister beetle. How It WorksYour health professional "paints" cantharidin on your wart and covers it with a bandage. This is generally painless. The cantharidin causes the skin under the wart to blister, lifting the wart off the skin. When the blister dries, the wart comes off with the blistered skin. You may feel some pain when the skin blisters. When you see your health professional again, he or she will remove the dead skin and the wart. If the wart isn't gone after one treatment, you may need another treatment. Why It Is UsedCantharidin is sometimes used if salicylic acid or freezing a wart with liquid nitrogen (cryotherapy) has not successfully eliminated it. Cantharidin should not be used:
How Well It WorksCantharidin may be effective against some warts that are resistant to other treatments. After the wart is gone, there usually is no scarring. Side EffectsCantharidin may cause:
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference is not available in all systems.) What To Think AboutCantharidin can be used to treat warts that are resistant to other forms of treatment. It is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of warts. Cantharidin is not well-researched or widely used. Although cantharidin does not hurt when it's applied, the resulting blister can be painful. Cantharidin has a low risk of scarring.
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