Acute paronychia usually responds well to simple drainage of the abscess without the need for systemic antimicrobials.
Chronic paronychia is encountered mainly in people whose hands are repeatedly exposed to water.
An ingrown toenail can be treated with conservative methods in mild cases. In more severe cases, partial nail avulsion is often required.
Aetiology
Acute paronychia
May manifest itself as a painful abscess at the nail fold, or it may become chronic when the cuticle disappears and the entire nail fold becomes erythematous with or without flaking skin.
An acute infection starts from a small cut (e.g. nail biting or a manicure procedure) or an ingrown edge of a nail.
The most common causative agent is Staphylococcus aureus.
The aetiology is multifactorial and cannot be explained by infection alone.
It may halt the growth of the nail and the nail plate may become partially detached (pictures 23).
Particularly encountered in people involved in wet working conditions. A swab collected from under the nail fold may grow Candida albicans with simultaneous bacterial growth, including S. aureus, pseudomonas or E. coli, the clinical significance of which remains controversial.
Treatment
Acute infection
In an acute phase the abscess is drained under local anaesthesia with an incision along the axis of the finger (for example, a scalpel blade no. 11).
The debridement of any infected necrotic tissue is carried out with a suitable instrument and the cavity is rinsed with, for example, physiological saline.
The finger should then be bathed 2-3 times a day for a few days (e.g. a potassium permanganate solution bath or with antiseptic soap or liquid body wash or just warm water for 10-15 minutes).
If paronychia is caused by an ingrown toenail (pictures 45), partial avulsion of the nail followed by an application of phenol (phenolisation) often suffices as treatment.
In mild cases, all that is needed in addition to bathing is a topical antimicrobial cream.
In more severe cases, systemic antimicrobial therapy may be needed: flucloxacillin 750-1 000 mg 3 times daily or cephalexin 500 mg 3 times daily. Duration of treatment is usually 7-10 days.
Chronic infection
The treatment of choice is the avoidance of exposure to moist environments and irritants.
Ingrown toenail is often caused by incorrect nail-cutting techniques, trauma, nail tearing or tight shoes.
An ingrown toenail damages the lateral nail fold which results in pain, chronic inflammation and the formation of granulation tissue, which may sometimes be fairly extensive.
Advice by a foot health practitioner regarding the correct nail cutting technique and any conservative treatments are beneficial in the prevention of ingrown toenails.
In mild and distal cases, a foot health nurse's procedures are often sufficient: nail edge elevation, gutter treatment, orthonyxia (Podofix® , nail brace etc.).
It is also important to minimize irritating factors, e.g. having spacious footwear, correct cutting technique and regular care of nails and nail wall skin.
In more severe cases, partial avulsion of the nail and phenolization have been used as treatment.
This approach is more effective and less traumatic than surgical wedge resection.
The chronic symptoms of an ingrown toenail will not resolve with antimicrobials, and elevation or removal of the nail margin is warranted.
After treatment of an ingrown nail (e.g. nail margin removal), the granulation tissue usually disappears spontaneously within 1-2 months. As necessary, granulation tissue can be removed superficially with a knife or a skin curette in association with nail margin removal (usually done under nerve block).
Provide nerve block anaesthesia to the toe. Lidocaine without or with adrenaline is usually used as the anaesthetic.
Apply a ring tourniquet to the toe.
Cut a 3-5 mm section of the affected nail border with surgical scissors. Extend the cut to under the proximal nail fold. The detached nail section is lifted off complete with the germinal matrix using, for example, artery forceps. Attempt to remove the entire matrix in one piece.
Dry the area and insert a cotton swab (e.g. a metal shafted pin used for the cleaning of the outer ear canal) soaked with 80% phenol into the nail groove created. Repeat the application 2-3 times so that the total application time is at least one minute. Remove excessive phenol by injecting physiological saline into the wound with a syringe.
Remove the ring tourniquet. Apply a paraffin dressing over the wound and cover with gauze dressings. Keep the dressings in place with an elastic bandage.
Instruct the patient to start bathing the toe on the next day for 10-15 minutes twice a day, for as long as discharge persists.
An antimicrobial cream is applied after bathing.
References
Exley V, Jones K, O'Carroll G, et al. A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials on surgical treatments for ingrown toenails part I: recurrence and relief of symptoms. J Foot Ankle Res 2023;16(1):35. [PubMed]
Eekhof JA, Van Wijk B, Knuistingh Neven A, et al. Interventions for ingrowing toenails. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2012;(4):CD001541. [PubMed]
Tosti A, Piraccini BM, Ghetti E, et al. Topical steroids versus systemic antifungals in the treatment of chronic paronychia: an open, randomized double-blind and double dummy study. J Am Acad Dermatol 2002;47(1):73-6. [PubMed]