Ingrown toenail removal: Difference between revisions

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*Clean area thoroughly
*Clean area thoroughly


===Complete (lateral) nail removal===
===Partial nail removal===
''Removing the entire lateral portion of the nail is the more definitive treatment''
''Removing the entire lateral or medial portion of affected nail (definitive treatment)''
*Lift the lateral quarter or third of the nail off of the nail bed with a hemostat
*Lift the affected side (up to 1/3 of the nail) off of the nail bed via blunt dissection with a hemostat
*Grasp the nail fragment with the hemostat and use a rotating motion  with the clamped hemostat toward the remaining nail to expose the
*Cut the nail with scissors or a nail anvil, distal to proximal, parallel to nail wall, with care not to injure the eponychium
*Cut the nail with scissors or a nail anvil, distal to proximal, parallel to nail wall, with care not to injure the eponychium
*Grasp the nail fragment with the hemostat and pull in a twisting motion distally and toward the remaining nail until removed
*Gently debride the exposed tissue


===Matricectomy===
===Matricectomy===

Revision as of 18:27, 21 February 2019

Indications

  • Advanced onychocryptosis (heavy granulation tissue, pain with walking)

Contraindications

  • Significant granulation tissue precluding partial nail removal
  • Multiple comorbidities in a patient not requiring immediate relief

Equipment needed

  • Gloves
  • Chlorhexidine or betadine
  • Syringe with 27-ga needle
  • 1% lidocaine without epinephrine or 0.5% bupivacaine
  • Gauze
  • Thin flat hemostat
  • Straight forceps
  • Iris scissors
  • Aqueous phenol or silver nitrate

Procedure

  • Perform Digital block using lidocaine without epinephrine or bupivacaine
  • Clean area thoroughly

Partial nail removal

Removing the entire lateral or medial portion of affected nail (definitive treatment)

  • Lift the affected side (up to 1/3 of the nail) off of the nail bed via blunt dissection with a hemostat
  • Grasp the nail fragment with the hemostat and use a rotating motion with the clamped hemostat toward the remaining nail to expose the
  • Cut the nail with scissors or a nail anvil, distal to proximal, parallel to nail wall, with care not to injure the eponychium

Matricectomy

Ablating the lateral matrix can decrease recurrence

  • Perform complete lateral nail removal as above
  • Apply a toe tourniquet for a bloodless field
  • Clean and dry base thoroughly
  • Ablate nail matrix by applying 1% aqueous phenol solution or silver nitrate

Post-procedure care

  • Cover with gauze, instruct to keep clean and dry, wash 2-3 times a day
  • No antibiotics unless surrounding cellulitis

Complications

  • Recurrence
  • Infection
  • Bleeding
  • Retained nail fragment

See Also

References