264 Beacon St.
2nd Floor
Boston, Ma 
617.262.2266 (p)
617.262.2261 (f)

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Insurance Plans

Boston Common Podiatry accepts the following insurance coverage:

  • Aetna
  • HCVM
  • United Healthcare
  • Harvard Pilgrim
  • Tufts
  • BCBS
  • PHCS
  • Cigna
  • Medicare
  • Oxford
  • Guardian
  • GHI
  • GIC
  • And most others....

What is a podiatrist?

Foot pain is not something you have to live with. Many people walk around for weeks, months or even years before they realize that the pain they are having is not normal...75% of Americans will seek podiatric care in their lifetime. A podiatrist is a physician specializing in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of all foot and some ankle disorders...

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Plantar Warts (Verruca Plantaris)

What are warts?
Warts are soft tissue growths that can occur on anywhere on the skin, including the soles of your feet. A wart that develops on the bottom of your foot is called a plantar wart. Warts are usually not painful, although they can be if a plantar wart is located on the ball or heel of the foot.
 
How can you get a wart?
All warts result from a viral infection of the skin caused by direct skin-to-skin contact. The virus, called Human Papillomavirus (HPV), enters the skin through a cut. The cut may be so small that it is invisible to the naked eye. Plantar warts are contracted in public places where people walk around barefoot like locker rooms, pools, gyms, and salons where foot care treatments such as pedicures are performed.
 
Are warts contagious?
All warts, including plantar warts, are very contagious and are easily spread by physical contact including touching or scratching, with skin shed from another wart.
 
How do you know it's a wart?
Often mistaken for benign lesions such as corns or calluses, plantar warts are often discovered while visiting a Boston podiatry office for foot care. Plantar warts are gray or brown in color, while common warts are white, tan, flesh colored, or pink in color. Serious malignant lesions can also be mistaken for a wart, which is why it's important to have any suspicious lesion checked by a podiatry specialist in Boston.

Plantar warts on the bottom of the foot are generally hard and flat, with a rough surface. They may have tiny black pinpoints scattered throughout. Warts on the top of the foot are raised and more fleshy looking.
 
Treatment
If left untreated warts, including plantar warts, can spread to other parts of the body. Self-treatment using over the counter acid preparations or freezing solutions is an option for many, but should be avoided by anyone with diabetes or circulatory disorders.

If you suspect a wart, contact a Boston podiatrist to confirm a diagnosis and get professional treatment, which may be a combination of shaving, application of a very strong acid, laser, freezing, or surgical excision. A series of treatments may be necessary to successfully eradicate plantar warts, which may grow deep into the skin.

About the Author : Dr. Jordana Szpiro is a Boston podiatrist providing comprehensive foot care and surgery to all ages.  Dr Szpiro specializes in pediatric podiatry and custom molded orthotics.  For more information or to contact Dr. Szpiro, visit Boston Common Podiatry .

Boston Common Podiatry now offers x-rays in our office!