How To Cope With Molluscum Contagiosum?

Molluscum contagiosum is a common type of skin problem and it causes due to a virus spreading easily from one individual to another one. People often get the problem by sharing clothes and towels. Gymnasts and wrestlers may get the problem by touching infected exercise or yoga mats. Besides this, contact between skins may even spread the virus.

Molluscum contagiosum appears as flesh-colored or pink colored bumps over the skin and such bumps may appear at almost every place on an individual’s skin. In most of the cases, individuals get 10 bumps to 20 bumps on the skin, while in case a person has weak immune system, a large number of bumps may appear.

How To Cope With Molluscum Contagiosum?

To cope up with the condition of molluscum contagiosum, it is essential for you to collect valuable pieces of information about the problem as much as you can. Especially, you should make sure to stay aware of key steps to avoid spreading molluscum contagiosum, as we have discussed in this article.

Molluscum contagiosum causes from a virus of same name and it thrives in humid climate and warm climate, along with in areas, where people live close together.

How To Cope With Molluscum Contagiosum?

People suffer from molluscum contagiosum infection whenever the virus enters any small break within the surface of one’s skin. In most of the cases, people with weak immune system often experience the problem within 2 weeks to 7 weeks after the infection.

The problem of molluscum contagiosum spreads in an easy way and usually via direct contact via skin. Even it spreads by touching different objects, which have viruses on them, like beds, towels and clothes. Along with this, the virus spreads via sexual contact.

Once an individual suffers from molluscum contagiosum, it spreads from a specific body part to another one whenever an individual rubs or scratches the bumps and just after that touches any other body part.

How Does Molluscum Contagiosum Looks?

As a type of skin infection, Molluscum Contagiosum appears in round shape and in skin-colored, white or pink color over the skin. These bumps remain filled by using a white and waxy core containing the infected virus. Each of the molluscum starts as small spots just similar to the size of any pinhead and grows for many weeks into a big bump, which might become large as similar to any pencil eraser or peas.

How to Stop/Avoid Spreading of Molluscum Contagiosum?

You have to perform a few important things to stop or avoid the spreading of molluscum contagiosum to your any other body part or to any other individual, which include-

  • Never scratch, touch or rub the growths
  • Wash the hands properly by water and soap
  • Keep the growth areas in clean condition

Take the essential steps to cover each of your growth by using watertight bandage or suitable clothes. You have to follow this step before each activity, where you have to share equipment or skin contact may take place, like wrestling and swimming.

  • Make sure changing the bandage on a daily basis
  • Never shave over areas, which have bumps
  • Make sure moisturizing your skin in case it becomes dry.

You have to follow the aforementioned precautions until and unless each of the bumps goes out properly. However, you may easily involve in sports or go to your school. You may even swim in any public swimming pool.

Additional Tips By Skin Specialists To Patients

As there is no assurance about the period up to which virus and rash may remain in contagious form, moreover, an individual may suffer from molluscum contagiosum again whenever he or she contacts with any other infected person. Because of this, skin specialists recommend a few additional tips for avoiding infection, which include-

  • Wash your hands regularly by using water and soap
  • Never share towels, clothes and other personal belongings
  • Strictly avoid the sharing of water toys, including kickboards at different swimming centers
  • Never scratch or touch bumps/blisters present on the skin.

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Team PainAssist
Team PainAssist
Written, Edited or Reviewed By: Team PainAssist, Pain Assist Inc. This article does not provide medical advice. See disclaimer
Last Modified On:June 3, 2021

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