Do the corn removal pads work?

Corns and calluses are probably the most commonly encountered condition that Podiatry practitioners deal with. Corns about the toes are caused by excessive force. That higher pressure causes the epidermis to thicken up to shield itself. The epidermis then gets to be so thick so it results in being painful. That force can be because of a many things like claw toes, bunions or dropped metatarsals. The only method to permanently do away with a corn should be to take off the high pressure that is causing the corn. There isn't any other way. That means dealing with the footwear fitting making sure that there are not any pressure spots and also address the bunions and claw toes. Debriding a corn out simply eliminates the thickened skin and this doesn't get rid of the cause. The hard corn will come back in due course if that cause remains. That cause should be resolved or it will be a continuing condition long term. Corns do not have roots which they re-grow from.

A popular option to try and take care of corns is to use medicated corn removal patches. The reasoning behind the corn removing patches is that they consist of an acid which is purported to eat at the corn to eliminate it. You place the medicated patch above the corn and leave the patch in position until it's eaten away at the corn to remove it. The thing is that the acid within the corn removing pad is not going to comprehend what is corn and what's isn't a corn, so the corn pad is likely to eat away at whatever you stick it on such as the normal skin. That might be dangerous and even more harmful in individuals who have underlying problems for example diabetes mellitus. The patch can probably remove some of the corn in the short term and give some pain relief, however that corn is probably likely to re-grow once again simply because that excessive pressure which instigated the corn continues.

 

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