Nevi-Skin Topical Treatment?
- Our product has been proven highly effective in removing; warts, moles, skin tags, syringoma and genital warts
- FAST results and simple application. Single application is often enough for removal in most circumstances
- Nevi-Skin is formulated with only the highest quality of natural herbal extracts
- Nevi-Skin is backed up with our 60 day unconditional guarantee!!
- Enough treatment for 2-4 large warts or 10-30 small moles
- Eliminates mole and warts quickly and painlessly without scarring
Alternative Treatment for Wart and Mole
Your doctor may suggest one of the following approaches, based on the location of your wart, the degree of your symptoms and your preferences. Doctors generally start with the least painful, least destructive methods, especially in young children.
Freezing Cryosurgery (freezing the wart): Your doctor may use liquid nitrogen to destroy your wart by freezing it; this isn't too painful but may require a couple of visits before the wart is completely removed.
Cantharidin: Your doctor may use cantharidin - a substance extracted from the blister beetle - on your warts. Typically, the extract is mixed with other chemicals, painted onto the skin and covered with a bandage. The application is painless, but the resulting skin blister can be uncomfortable. However, the blister has an important purpose. It lifts the wart off your skin, so your doctor can remove the dead part of the wart.
Minor surgery: This involves cutting away the wart tissue or destroying it by using an electric needle in a process called electrodessication and curettage. However, the injection of anesthetic given before this surgery can be painful, and the surgery may leave a scar. For these reasons, surgery is usually reserved for warts that haven't responded to other therapies.
Laser surgery: Laser surgery can be expensive, and it may leave a scar. It's usually reserved for tough-to-treat warts.
Other Medications: If you have a bad case of warts that hasn't responded to standard treatments, your doctor may refer you to a dermatologist for further treatment including:
Imiquimod (Aldara). This immunotherapy medication is marketed for the treatment of genital warts, but it's also successful in treating common warts. Immunotherapy attempts to harness your body's natural rejection system to fight off warts. This prescription cream appears to increase the skin's immune response to the wart, resulting in the death of the wart.
Bleomycin (Blenoxane). Your doctor may inject a wart with a medication called bleomycin, which kills the virus. Bleomycin is used infrequently for warts, but in higher doses, is used to treat some kinds of cancer.