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Are You Sick?
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Toenail - Ingrown
Is this your symptom?
- The corner of the toenail grows into the skin around it
- Almost always involves the big toe
Symptoms of an Ingrown Toenail
- Toe pain from sharp corner of toenail cutting into surrounding skin.
- Redness and swelling around the corner of the toenail is common.
- The area may drain pus or yellow fluid.
- The red area is very tender to touch. Pressure from wearing a shoe may make it worse.
- Some people with an ingrown toenail can barely walk.
Cause of an Ingrown Toenail
- The toenail is usually pushed into the skin by wearing tight shoes.
- The tiny cut made by the nail allows bacteria to enter the skin. The cut then becomes infected.
- The sharp corner of the buried nail keeps growing. The deeper it goes, the more painful it becomes.
When to Call for Toenail - Ingrown
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
| Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
| Self Care at Home
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Care Advice
What You Should Know about Ingrown Toenails:
- Ingrown toenails are always painful.
- Pain is caused by the sharp toenail edge cutting into the skin around it.
- The pain can be stopped. Find the toenail corner and lift it out of the raw tissue.
- This will allow the area to heal.
- Most ingrown toenails can be treated at home. Surgery or nail removal is rarely needed.
- Here is some care advice that should help.
Warm Water Soaks:
- Soak the toe in warm water and soap for 20 minutes twice a day.
- While soaking, massage the swollen part of the cuticle (skin next to the nail). Massage away from the nail.
- While soaking, also try to bend the corners of the toenail upward. Use your fingernail to lift it.
- Dry the toe and foot completely.
Raise Corner of Toenail with Dental Floss:
- Goal: to help the toenail corner grow over the cuticle, rather than into it.
- The area won't heal until you expose the corner of the nail.
- Often you can lift it with your fingernail.
- If not, take a short strip of dental floss or fishing line. Try to slip it under the corner of the nail. Then, gently lift the nail upward. Cut off any sharp edge.
- Take a small wedge of cotton from a cotton ball. Try to place the wedge under the nail corner to keep it raised. Sometimes this step is not possible.
- Raise the corner away from the cuticle with every soak.
Antibiotic Ointment:
- After each soak, use an antibiotic ointment (such as Polysporin). Put it on the swollen part of the toe.
- You can buy this ointment without a prescription.
Take Pressure Off Toenail with a Foam Pad or Cotton Ball:
- Until it heals, try to wear sandals or go barefoot.
- When you must wear closed-toe shoes, protect the ingrown toenail as follows:
- Inner Edge of Toe. If the inner edge of the big toe is involved, try this: Tape a cotton ball or foam pad between the lower part of the first and second toes. This will keep the upper toes from touching.
- Outer Edge of Toe. If the outer edge is involved, use a cotton ball. Tape it to the outside of the affected toe, but lower than the painful area.
- This will keep the toenail from touching the side of the shoe.
- Weather-stripping from a hardware store makes the best foam pad. Reason: has adhesive on one side.
- Never wear tight, narrow, or pointed shoes.
Pain Medicine:
- To help with the pain, take an acetaminophen product (such as Tylenol).
- Another choice is an ibuprofen product (such as Advil). Ibuprofen works well for this type of pain.
- Use as needed, but do not take more than the maximum recommended dosage as stated on the package.
- If you are not sure what to take, ask a pharmacist.
Prevention - Nail Trimming:
- Cut you toenails straight across, so you can see the corners. Use a nail clipper.
- Do not round off the corners. Keep the corners visible.
- Do not cut them too short.
- After baths or showers, the nails are soft. Bend the corners of the toenails upward.
Prevention - Wear Shoes That Fit:
- Make sure that your shoes are not too narrow. Give away any pointed or tight shoes.
- Tight narrow shoes are the most common cause of ingrown toenails.
- Shoes should have a wide toe box. The toes should not feel cramped.
What to Expect:
- With treatment, the pus should be gone in 48 hours.
- Pain should be gone in 1 week.
- The area should be healed up in 2 weeks.
Call Your Doctor If:
- Spreading redness or fever occur
- Pus pocket occurs
- Not improved after 7 days
- You think you need to be seen
- Your symptoms get worse
Remember! Contact your doctor if you or your child develop any "Contact Your Doctor" symptoms.
Disclaimer: this health information is for educational purposes only. You, the reader, assume full responsibility for how you choose to use it.
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