Treatment Overview
Nonsurgical (chemical) nail removal is a painless procedure for a
fungal nail infection. This technique removes only the
diseased and damaged nail, not the healthy part of the nail.
It is done in a clinic or your health
professional's office. Either the entire nail (avulsion) or part of the nail
(debridement) can be removed. This procedure is almost always painless.
Your health professional will first place cloth adhesive tape on
the normal skin around the infected nail. A urea ointment (Ureacin) is then put
directly on the nail surface and covered with plastic and tape. The ointment
softens the nail over the next 7 to 10 days. You must keep the nail and
dressing dry during this time.
After the nail softens, your health professional removes the
treated nail by lifting the nail away from the nail bed or by cutting out the
diseased portion of the nail.
What To Expect After Treatment
The area exposed by the nail removal should be kept dry. It should
heal within 2 weeks. Fingernails may take 6 months to grow back, and toenails
may take 12 to 18 months to grow back.
Why It Is Done
Nonsurgical nail removal can be used for severe antifungal
infections and on nails that have increased in size due to abnormal growth
(hypertrophic). It is rarely necessary.
How Well It Works
After the diseased and dead tissue has been removed, the infection
can be further treated by applying an antifungal cream to the remaining
infected area or by taking oral antifungal medication.
Risks
After nail removal, the wound can become infected. You can reduce
the risk of infection by keeping the area clean and dry, and regularly applying
antibiotic ointment.
The fungal infection may not be killed and may infect the new nail
that grows.
What To Think About
Nail removal makes it possible to apply an antifungal cream
directly to the infected area, increasing the likelihood that the infection can
be cured.
This procedure offers a good chance of cure for severe nail
infections.
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