Warts and molluscum contagiosum are among the most frustrating skin conditions parents deal with in children — they spread, they persist, they reappear, and they seem impossible to get rid of without professional treatment. At YouBelong Pediatrics in Suwanee, GA, Dr. Rabia Akbar provides safe, effective, in-office treatment for both warts and molluscum contagiosum for children across North Georgia — using child-friendly, proven methods that minimize discomfort and actually work. No dermatology referral delay, no months of waiting — expert treatment available right in our office.
Why Choose YouBelong Pediatrics for Wart & Molluscum Treatment?
Families across Suwanee, Duluth, Cumming, Alpharetta, Johns Creek, and North Georgia choose YouBelong Pediatrics for wart and molluscum treatment because they are tired of watching these infections spread while waiting for a dermatology appointment. We offer:
Warts vs. Molluscum Contagiosum — How They Differ
Warts and molluscum are both viral skin infections common in children, but they are caused by different viruses, look different, spread differently, and are treated differently. Accurate diagnosis is the essential first step at every visit.
- Caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) — non-cancer strains
- Rough, raised, skin-colored growths on hands, feet, and fingers
- Plantar warts on soles are flat and painful — often mistaken for calluses
- Spread through direct contact with infected skin or surfaces
- Treated with cryotherapy (liquid nitrogen) and salicylic acid
- Most resolve with 2–4 treatment sessions, 3–4 weeks apart
- Caused by a poxvirus — entirely separate from HPV
- Round, pearly bumps with a central dimple (umbilicated)
- Most common on trunk, underarms, inside elbows, and neck
- Spreads through skin contact, shared towels, and pool water
- Treated with cantharidin, curettage, or topical agents
- Spreads more extensively in children with eczema — prioritize early treatment
Wart & Molluscum Treatment Methods at YouBelong Pediatrics
YouBelong Pediatrics offers multiple in-office and at-home treatment options for warts and molluscum. The approach is tailored to your child's age, lesion count, location, and comfort level — because a treatment your child can tolerate is far more effective than one they cannot.
Cryotherapy
Liquid nitrogen applied to freeze and destroy wart tissue — the most effective wart treatment over 2–4 sessions
Salicylic Acid
Daily home application between office visits — improves treatment outcomes significantly when used consistently
Cantharidin
Applied in-office, causes the lesion to blister and resolve — highly effective and leaves no scarring
Curettage
Physical removal of lesions — effective but used selectively based on lesion count and child's comfort
Tretinoin & Imiquimod
Topical options for older children with mild infection — adjunct to in-office treatment
EMLA Anesthetic
Topical numbing cream applied before cryotherapy when appropriate — reduces pain anxiety significantly
Warts & Molluscum in School & Sports Settings
Parents frequently ask whether their child needs to stay home from school or avoid sports with warts or molluscum. The answer depends on the location, sport type, and whether lesions can be covered. YouBelong Pediatrics provides clear, evidence-based guidance — not overly cautious advice that disrupts your child's activities unnecessarily.
When Warts or Molluscum Signal Something More
In the vast majority of children, warts and molluscum are straightforward viral infections of healthy skin. However, extensive, rapidly spreading, or treatment-resistant cases can occasionally signal an underlying immune deficiency. YouBelong Pediatrics evaluates all patients with appropriate clinical consideration.
- Extensive molluscum (dozens to hundreds of lesions) — immune evaluation may be warranted
- Rapidly spreading warts in a previously healthy child — immune function assessment considered
- Giant or confluent molluscum — associated with atopic dermatitis; also consider HIV in appropriate contexts
- Treatment-resistant warts despite multiple appropriate sessions — dermatology referral initiated
- Referral to pediatric dermatology for complex, extensive, or resistant cases
Extensive molluscum in a child with known eczema is expected due to skin barrier impairment — but dozens of lesions in a child without eczema warrants a closer look at immune function.



