How can I Tell If I Have Genital Warts?

The best way to tell if you have contracted genital warts is to get examined by your urologist or gynecologist. Sometimes you may experience an itching burning sensation but most times there are no symptoms. You can find more information here: health.com/health/condition-article/0,,2....

Sounds crazy, but it's true - human papillomavirus (or HPV), albeit a different type of the virus than one which causes cervical cancer, is what causes those painful and ugly plantar warts to appear on the soles of our feet. What causes plantar warts? People get warts through direct contact with HPV, of which there are many different types.

The type that causes plantar warts likes to hang out in damp, warm environments - the kind that arouse your suspicion anyway, like public showers, swimming pools, locker rooms, your roommates shower mat, or communal shoes (if you're sharing shoes with people, you might want to inspect their feet first). If you walk barefoot through these areas, you could acquire plantar warts. Person-to-person contact can spread plantar warts as well.

If you have a sleeping partner, remember that these warts never sleep! The virus can pass from foot to foot, or from sheets to your foot. You chances of getting plantar warts increase if your feet are dry and cracked, or your immune system weakened.

The more often you are exposed to the virus, the more likely it is that you will develop the warts (there is no "build-up" of resistance to the virus through frequent exposure). It's important to point out that not everyone is as vulnerable to plantar warts (or warts in general) as others. Some of us are just lucky!

The medical community is puzzled as to why this is the case, but predisposition to plantar warts seemingly plays a role in our acquisition of them. How can I tell if I have plantar warts? You should see a doctor to confirm a diagnosis, since in some cases the uncomfortable growth on your foot is something entirely different (possibly a clogged sweat gland or even a tumor).

Plantar warts often appear near the balls of the foot or around the heel (essentially, the places that most likely made contact with the virus in the first place). You can feel the lump of a plantar wart as you walk, but when you look at it, the wart appears surprisingly flat. Due to their location on the body, plantar warts grown inward as opposed to outward.

As a result, it won't look like a wart on someone's face. It feels like a callus because it's covered in callus tissue due to the frequent pressure of walking.

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