How nice and obliging of the virus to congregate in one place so that it may be annihilated! <g> Good hunch.
Seriously, my son had a very serious case of warts in childhood, such that it would have been impossible to treat them individually. His condition was systemic. I think it depends a great deal on the type of wart "virus" that one is dealing with but in general, a virus is opportunistic and the appearance of its local might have something to do with its ability to take "root" so to speak. The tougher layers of skin, like the feet and hands would generally provide deeper, sturdier layers to colonize and propagate. A virus regardless of it MO is smart, stealth and seeks to ensure its longevity. ransley <[email protected]> wrote: Carol Ann wrote: Daddtbob, > Do you think the virus is contained or has isolatated itself to her big toe > only or is it perhaps that the wart virus just tends to manifest in > particular body regions. < I'm qualified only to report my observations and hunches, so here goes- My hunch is that this is now contained. My hunch is that this is a direct result of her anti-Lyme protocols, that at a young age we have put the human pappiloma (sp?) virus on the run along with many other things. My hunch is that it was more spread out in her body, then when it was under attack, the first colony to find a place of refuge sent out whatever communication there is unique to that organism- and I do think there is such a phenomenon- to others of its kind and they all congregated there. And that's where we're wiping them out. Daddybob Carol Ann _______________________________ The Pessimist complains about the Wind; The Optimist expects it to change; The Realist adjusts the Sails. - The world needs more sailors. --------------------------------- Brings words and photos together (easily) with PhotoMail - it's free and works with Yahoo! Mail.

