What harm does long filiform wart have?

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summary

What is filiform wart? Do you make it? When it comes to filiform wart, many people may not be familiar with it. In fact, filiform wart is also a common kind of wart disease. There is no law in the onset of this disease. Due to the rapid development, patients need to get effective control within a certain period of time to relieve the pain and achieve ideal therapeutic effect. Now let's talk about what is filiform wart and its harm.

What harm does long filiform wart have?

Filiform wart is a special fractal in scrofula disease, which can cause allergy, cancer, HIV, hepatitis and other immune system diseases by destroying immune ability. The main symptoms of filamentous warts are that the skin lesions are single filamentous processes, which can gather and disperse, usually brown or light brown. Filamentous vegetations are slender and soft, and can be pedicled.

Filiform wart is harmful to women's face, neck and other sensitive parts. It has strong infectivity, and can infect many parts through self inoculation. It can cause disfigurement after large-scale infection, which greatly affects the vision and the communication between people. Many friends like to use their own hair to encircle the root of the filiform wart, pick it with their hands, or make some so-called folk prescription chemical cauterization, etc., which is easy to infect and leave scars and pigmentation.

Long term infection of human papillomavirus (HPV), which causes the symptoms of filamentous warts, can harm the immune system response mechanism of the human body and make the immune system unable to operate normally, thus leading to systemic immune system diseases, such as allergy, hepatitis, nephritis, cancer and so on. At present, it is also found that there are various gynecological inflammation closely associated with this virus.

matters needing attention

Verruca is a kind of benign neoplasm that occurs in the superficial skin. Filiform wart is one of the diseases of scrofula, which is caused by human papillomavirus. It occurs in small silk like vegetations on the superficial skin, commonly known as "thread scrofula". It is infectious and can be connected into pieces. It is moderately infectious. It usually occurs in female patients over 30 years old, mostly in the neck or eyelid.