Pulsed 1064nm Nd:YAG in the Treatment of Verruca Vulgaris Versus Conventional Therapy With Liquid Nitrogen Cryotherapy
Verruca Vulgaris
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Verruca Vulgaris focused on measuring verruca vulgaris, hands, feet, Nd:YAG, laser, cryotherapy
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adult males or females, ages 18 - 75
- Fitzpatrick skin types 1-6
- Patient is able to read and understand English and will give written informed consent to participate.
- Patient elects to undergo laser therapy or conventional therapy with liquid nitrogen for the treatment of verruca vulgaris.
- Clinical evidence of at least one verruca vulgaris, but no more than ten that have not received treatment for at least one month prior to their study start date.
- Warts to be treated will be located only on the hands or the feet.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Less than 18 years of age or greater than 75 years of age.
- Non-English speaking people, who cannot read, understand and sign the consent.
- Pregnant females.
- Any form of prior treatment to the area within the last 1 month.
- Immunosuppressed patients including patients with internal malignancy, on immunosuppressive drugs (including oral steroids), HIV positive or history of connective tissue disease (ie. SLE, DM, Scleroderma).
- Patients undergoing light therapy including NBUVB, PUVA, high UVB will be excluded from the study until their treatment is complete.
- Allergy to any components of the topical lidocaine (LMX, 4% lidocaine).
Sites / Locations
- St. Joseph Mercy Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Experimental
Liquid Nitrogen Cryotherapy
Pulsed 1064nm Nd:YAG
Every two weeks for a total of 5 treatments or until the patient clears, patients in the cryotherapy arm will be treated with 5-7 seconds of freeze time maintaining a 1mm freeze halo around the wart.
Every 2 weeks for a total of five treatments or until the wart clears, patients in the laser arm will be treated with the Nd:YAG. The settings will be 180J, 20ms pulse width and 5mm spot size. For warts 3mm or less, a 3mm spot size will be used, 180J and 15ms. If the patient reports no response after treatment, including crusting or blistering, the energy will be increased by 10 J until 200J has been reached.