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See also: children and See also: young persons; a long pendulous variety occurs about the See also: chin or. neck of delicate children, and on the See also: scalp in adults
.
Warts are See also: apt to come out in numbers at a See also: time; a crop of them suddenly appears, to disappear after a time with equal suddenness
.
Hence the sup-posed efficacy of charms
.
A single See also: wart will sometimes remain when the general eruption has vanished
.
The liability of crops of warts runs in families
.
In after See also: life a wart on the hands or fingers is usually brought on by some irritation, often repeated, even if it be slight
.
Warts often occur on the wrists and knuckles of slaughter-See also: house men and of those much occupied with anatomical dissection; they are often of tuberculous origin (butchers' warts)
.
Chimney-sweeps and workers in See also: coal-See also: tar, petroleum, &c., are subject to warts, which often become cancerous
.
Warts occur singly in later life on the nose or lips or other parts of the
face, sometimes on the See also: tongue; they are very apt to become malignant
.
Towards old age broad and flattened patches of warts of a greasy consistence and brownish colour often occur on the back and shoulders
.
They also are apt to become malignant
.
Indeed, warts occurring on the lip or tongue, or on anySee also: part of the See also: body of a See also: person advanced in life, should be suspected of malignant associations and dealt with accordingly
.
Venereal warts occur as the result of gonorrhoeal irritation or syphilitic infection
.
A wart consists of a delicate framework of See also: blood-vessels sup-ported by fibrous tissue, with a covering of epidermic scales
.
When the wart is young, the See also: surface is rounded; as it gets rubbed it is cleft into projecting points
.
The blood-vessels, whose outgrowth from the surface really makes the wart, may be in a cluster of parallel loops, as in the See also: common sessile wart, or the vessels may branch from a single See also: stem, making the long, pendulous warts of the chin and neck
.
The same kinds of warts also occur on mucous surfaces
.
It is owing to its vascularity that a wart is liable to come back after being shaved off; the vessels are cut down to the level of the skin, but the blood is still forced into the stem, and the branches are thrown out beyond the surface as before
.
This fact has a bearing on the treatment of warts, if they are snipped off, the blood-vessels of the stem should be destroyed at the same time by a hot wire or some other See also: caustic, or made to shrivel by an astringent
.
The same end is served by a gradually tightening ligature (such as a thread of elastic) round the See also: base of the wart
.
Glacial acetic or carbolic acid may be applied on the end of a See also: glass See also: rod, or by a camel-hair See also: brush, care being taken not to touch the adjoining skin
.
A solution of perchloride of iron is also effective in the same way
.
Nitrate of See also: silver is objectionable, owing to the black stains See also: left by it
.
A See also: simple domestic remedy, often effectual, is the astringent and acrid juice of the common stonecrop (See also: Sedum See also: acre) rubbed into the wart, time after time, from the freshly gathered herb
.
The result of these various applications is that the wart loses its firmness, shrivels up, and falls off
.
Malignant and tuberculous warts should be removed by the scalpel or See also: sharp spoon, their bases, if thought advisable, being treated by pure carbolic acid
.
A See also: peculiar See also: form of wart, known as See also: vet-ragas, occurs endemically in the See also: Andes
.
It is believed to have been one of the causes of the excessive mortality from haemorrhages of the skin among the troops of Pizarro
.
See also: Attention was called to it by Dr Archibald See also: Smith in 1842; in 1874, during the making of the Trans-Andean railway, it caused considerable loss of life among
See also: English navvies and See also: engineers
.
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