FOOT PAIN & PODIATRY ONLINE
FOOT PAIN - INGROWN
TOENAILS
When
foot pain and tenderness occurs in the side of the nail, the
most common problem encountered is an ingrown toenail.
The Podiatry presentation of an ingrown nail is usually a painful
nail border with a red and swollen skin area next to the nail.
Sometimes there is pus and a red colored skin growth called
a pyrogenic granuloma. Infections are associated with this
medical problem but many times in just removing the offending
border, the infection does not need to be treated with oral antibiotics.
Many people believe that cutting the nail too rounded will cause
an ingrown nail. However, only the most distal part of
the nail will be involved if in fact the nail was cut too short
or rounded. If the entire side of the toe nail is inflamed,
then the cause is not how the nail was cut but how the nail is
growing from the root of the nail called the matrix. If
the entire side of the nail is involved, a ingrown nail procedure
is required or the nail will continue to in grow as it comes
to the end of the toe. Many patients have just the border
avulsed by their family doctor to have the problem return in
six months as the nail regrows.
Treatment for an ingrown nails
involves the use of Phenol which is a chemical that causes a
alkaline burn to the skin that grows the nail and in so doing
only that part of the nail that is ingrowing is treated and the
remaining healthily nail continues to grow. In the hands
of an experienced Podiatric Surgeon, the procedure is very painless
and the recovery is usually a non-issue. The toe is numbed
but should not be a painful experience. In the wrong hands,
a digital shot in the toe can be quite painful. The procedure
takes about half an hour to an hour and no cuts are made in the
skin. The nail is carefully separated from the healthy
nail and the nail is then lifted off the matrix skin to allow
the skin responsible for growing the nail to be treated for about
three minutes with the Phenol medicine. After care is once
a day soaking to twice a day soaking and covering the ingrown
are with a band aid. There are different types of procedures
that are preformed but generally, the method using a scalpel
to cut out the matrix is rarely indicated and will leave an unsightly
scar. Laser for ingrown toenails is a gimmick and has a
high rate of complication in having the ingrown nail regrow in
strange directions causing intense pain. In fact,
most doctor's using Laser as a marketing gimmick, use the Phenol
chemical along with the Laser. The Laser is nothing more
than a hot beam of light that is used to burn the tissue. There
is no research that supports that causing a Laser burn is less
painful than other methods. as some doctors try to sell the procedure
to patients to make their office look like there state of the
art. In performing thousands of ingrown toenail procedures,
and seeing many complication from Laser procedures, generally,
no patient should have the Laser procedure over the Phenol procedure.
If a patient has a chronic ingrown
toenail, the skin under the nail becomes callouses and the nail
can no longer push through the skin and the nail must then lift
off the nail in order to grow to the end of the toe. If
you have a history of ingrown toenails and now have fungus nails,
many times the cure to the fungus nail problem is having the
chronic ingrown toenail corrected so the healthy nail can grow
and remained attached to the nail bed.
Ultimately, ingrown toe nails
should be treated by permanent removal of the border that is
growing into the skin of the toe. Avulsion of the border
is used only as a temporary intervention and in four to six months
the ingrown nail will return. Avulsion is appropriate if
there is an important event that must be attended and after the
event the ingrown nail is then treated. In just performing
the avulsion with no other treatment plan, the problem of the
ingrown nail will only get worse because the inflammation from
the initial ingrown nail will make the next ingrown nail occurrence
even worse.
Copyright © 1999 PLACENTIA-LINDA
FOOT AND ANKLE GROUP Podiatry Associates. All rights reserved.
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