Ingrown nails

Ingrown Nail

Information

Overview

Ingrown toenails are a common condition in which the corner or side of a toenail grows into the soft flesh. The result is pain, inflamed skin, swelling and, sometimes, an infection. Ingrown toenails usually affect the big toe.

Often you can take care of ingrown toenails on your own. If the pain is severe or spreading, your health care provider can take steps to relieve your discomfort and help you avoid complications of ingrown toenails.

If you have diabetes or another condition that causes poor blood flow to your feet, you're at greater risk of complications of ingrown toenails.

Symptoms of Ingrown toenail symptoms include:

·  Pain and tenderness

·  Inflamed skin.

·  Swelling

·  Infection

Causes of ingrown toenails include:

·  Wearing shoes that crowd the toenails.

·  Cutting toenails too short or not straight across

·  Injuring a toenail

·  Having very curved toenails

·  Nail infections

·  Certain medical conditions

Risk factors of ingrown toenails include:

·  Being an adolescent, when feet tend to perspire more, which softens the nail and skin.

·  Having nail care habits that encourage the nail to grow into the skin, such as cutting the nails too short or rounding the corners

·  Having a reduced ability to care for your nails

·  Wearing shoes that constrict the toes.

·  Participating in activities, such as running and kicking, that put your toes at risk of injury

·  Having a condition, such as diabetes, that causes poor blood flow

To help prevent an ingrown toenail:

·  Trim your toenails straight across. Don't curve your nails to match the shape of the front of your toe. If you get a pedicure, ask the person doing it to trim your nails straight across. If you have a condition that causes poor blood flow to the feet and you can't trim your nails, see a podiatrist regularly to have your nails trimmed.

·  Keep toenails at a moderate length. Trim toenails so they're even with the tips of your toes. If you trim your toenails too short, the pressure from your shoes on your toes may direct a nail to grow into the tissue.

·  Wear shoes that fit properly. Shoes that place too much pressure on your toes or pinch them may cause a nail to grow into surrounding tissue. If you have nerve damage to the feet, you may not be able to sense if your shoes fit too tightly.

·  Wear protective footwear. If your activities put you at risk of injuring your toes, wear protective footwear, such as steel-toed shoes.

·  Check your feet. If you have diabetes, check your feet daily for signs of ingrown toenails or other foot problems.

Get help from your health care provider if you:

·  Experience severe discomfort in a toe, pus or inflamed skin that seems to be spreading.

Have diabetes or another condition that causes poor blood flow to the feet and you have a foot sore or infection Ingrown toenails

The Foot Health Practitioner will be able to remove the ingrown part of the nail.


Treatment

Ingrown Toenails

Ingrown nails can be very painful and even after treatment by a Podiatrist can return some months later. Often the only cure is total removal of the nail. There are many presentations of ingrown nails, and some can be treated by cutting away the edge of the nail. This can be uncomfortable sometimes depending on the degree of ingrown and if there is infection. Caught early on, ingrowns can be relieved before they get infected, easily and without anaesthetic. I can do this along with determining if referral is needed to a GP or Podiatrist


Ingrowns don't have to be deep and messy to cause pain. Just a small ingrown can cause discomfort and will get worse as the nail grows.

Caught early, an ingrown can be clipped away and the nail trimmed and filed around the edges preventing further pain