Top Ways to Get Rid of an Ingrown Toenail Naturally

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Top Ways to Get Rid of an Ingrown Toenail Naturally

In this article, you’ll learn and discover top ways to get rid of an ingrown toenail naturally.

What is an ingrown toenail, and what causes it? It’s a common condition in which the corner or side of a toenail grows into the soft flesh. Many anatomic and behavioral factors are thought to contribute to ingrown toenails, such as improper trimming, repetitive or inadvertent trauma, genetic predisposition, hyperhidrosis, and poor foot hygiene.

Ingrown toenails are classified into three categories: mild (stage 1), moderate (stage 2), and severe (stage 3). Mild cases are characterized by nail-fold swelling, erythema, edema, and pain with pressure. Moderate cases are associated with increased swelling, drainage, infection, and ulceration of the nail fold. The most severe cases of ingrown toenail exhibit chronic inflammation and granulation, as well as marked nail-fold hypertrophy.

Regardless, the result is pain, redness, swelling, and, sometimes, an infection. Ingrown toenails usually affect the big toe, though other toes can also be affected. Most often, ingrown toenails can be self-treated. However, if the pain is severe or spreading, you may need to check in with your doctor to relieve your discomfort and help you avoid further complications.

How can you be sure you have an ingrown toenail? If you have any of the following symptoms, chances are you do:

  • Pain and tenderness in your toe along one or both sides of the nail
  • Redness around your toenail
  • Swelling of your toe around the nail
  • Infection of the tissue around your toenail

The good news is there are natural ways to treat the ingrown toenail. Though many resorts to surgery if in stages 2 or 3, that is usually not necessary if the nail is in stage 1, especially if you take care of the situation as soon as you notice it.

Here’s how:

Soak or Wash the Foot

Soaking the foot in warm, soapy water can be very beneficial in helping keep the area clean and free of bacteria. Soak the foot in warm water three to four times per day. You can add Epsom salt to the water to soften the skin of the affected area, which could make it easier to draw out the toenail from the skin.

Wash with Castile Soap

If soaking doesn’t work well with your schedule, you can try washing the foot and affected area twice a day with soap and water. You may want to consider Castile soap due to its natural and pure ingredients. Make sure to keep the foot clean and dry.

Apple Cider Vinegar Wash

Apple cider vinegar can help as a natural treatment for an ingrown toenail. You can try adding a quarter cup of vinegar to warm water for a foot soak or direct application of apple cider vinegar that has been diluted with purified water. While applying diluted apple cider vinegar to a wound may stave off infection, it may not cure an existing bacterial infection. However, it has antibacterial characteristics that can help keep the area clean as it heals.

Dental Floss Under the Nail

Placing cotton wisps or dental floss under the ingrown nail edge can help by shifting the nail to grow in the correct direction instead of down into the skin. Try to lift up the corner of the nail that’s digging into the skin. Take a very small piece of cotton or gauze, and roll it between the fingers to form a small roll or wick. Place it between the nail and the skin.

For a gentler method, use the dental floss, but you may want to make sure it’s not a flavored version, as that could cause a burning sensation. The idea is to keep the nail elevated long enough to allow it to grow out and away from the skin. This is uncomfortable but effective.

Another helpful step you can take after every soaking is to try to push the roll a little farther in. Make sure to change the roll out every day. It may take one to two weeks for the nail to grow out, so be patient. In some cases, you may need to carefully cut the nail to get underneath it. Below, I have included step-by-step instructions on how to cut the nail.

Avoid High Heels and Tight Shoes

I know many women enjoy looking at high heels, but if you want the ingrown toenail to remedy quickly, you need to avoid these shoes. They can cause more pressure to place in the area, and that’s likely to cause a big delay in healing as well as pain. Tight-fitting shoes of any kind can cause this problem. Sandals can be helpful, allowing the nail the freedom to heal correctly.

Use Essential Oils to Help Reduce Inflammation and Pain

You can create your very own essential oil blend by combining melaleuca, (tea tree oil), Cyprus, clove, lavender, and rosemary with a carrier oil, such as coconut oil. Blend well, then gently massage onto the affected area.  This helps you avoid synthetic medications by providing a natural remedy for the ingrown toenail, ultimately giving the area a healthier environment with which to heal. I have provided an ingrown toenail ointment recipe below using essential oils that may work well for you.

Equipment you may need

  • A clean soft towel
  • Toenail cleaning instrument or lifting tool(as in the photo)
  • Toenail scissors
  • Cotton wool
  • Foot cream. (anti-fungal and antiseptic)
  • Footbath bowl (to soften the toenail)
  • Epsom salts or a good foot bath mineral

How to Cut an Ingrown Toenail

Cutting an ingrown toenail can be difficult, which is why I recommend that you’re very careful and have some help if you choose to do it at home. Here’s a step-by-step guide:

  1. First, soak your feet in warm water mixed with either Epsom salt or Castile soap for about 20 minutes to help soften the toenail and skin and reduce any swelling.
  2. Next, using clean fingers, push back the swollen skin carefully. This will likely be uncomfortable. Don’t force it back more than the swollen skin allows.
  3. Now, you need to cut the nail straight across. Start with the edges of the toenail, cutting the nail from the sides, not from the middle.
  4. Place a small piece of cotton between the ingrown nail and skin. This helps the ingrown toenail from coming back, allowing it to grow correctly.
  5. Apply the ointment in the recipe below to the affected area, and bandage it carefully.
  6. To help with healing, avoid wearing socks and shoes while at home. Wear flip-flops or some shoe that avoids dirt but allows open air.
  7. It’s important to prevent infection by changing the cotton daily, maybe even twice a day.

Homemade Ingrown Toenail Ointment Recipe

You can make your very own ointment to help heal an ingrown toenail. Essential oils can help relieve pain and prevent infection. By putting this ointment directly on your toe, you can find some much-needed relief and-and faster healing.

INGREDIENTS:

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Place all ingredients in a small glass jar with a tight-fitting lid.
  2. Using a small spoon, stir until well-blended.
  3. After careful cleaning and rinsing of the toe, apply the ointment on the area.
  4. Allow it to air dry, if possible, by wearing flip-flops. If not, carefully and loosely bandage the toe, but make sure to wear loose-fitting shoes.
  5. Redress the area two to three times per day. Make sure to wash the hands after and avoid the eyes, especially when using oregano oil. Oregano is a natural antibiotic but can be very strong giving a burning sensation. It’s important to use these oils as prescribed, with a carrier oil such as the coconut oil.

Common Causes of an Ingrown Toenail

Some of the most common causes of an ingrown toenail include:

  • Wearing shoes that crowd the toenails, such as heels or any shoes that are too tight
  • Cutting toenails too short or not straight across
  • Injuring the toenail
  • Having unusually curved toenails
  • Toe deformities
  • Subungual exostosis (an outgrowth of bone from the tip of the toe)
  • Use of isotretinoin in the treatment of severe acne

There are many risk factors involved in the development of ingrown toenails, such as anatomic and behavioral mechanisms. Some experts suggest that wider nail folds and thinner, flatter nails may increase the risk of ingrown toenails. A case-control study of 46 patients found no difference in the anatomic shape of toenails in patients with and without ingrown toenails.

Repetitive trauma, such as running, kicking, or inadvertent trauma like stubbing the toe, may be factors. Without any strict evidence basis, it’s thought that a genetic predisposition and family history, hyperhidrosis, and poor foot hygiene increase the likelihood of ingrown toenails. Diabetes, obesity, thyroid, cardiac and renal disorders that may predispose to lower extremity edema can also increase the likelihood.

In adolescence, feet perspire more often, causing the skin and nails to become soft, resulting in easy splitting. This produces nail spicules that can pierce the lateral skin. In older persons, spicule formation can become a chronic problem caused by their reduced ability to care for their nails, secondary to reduced mobility or impaired vision. In addition, the natural aging process causes the toenails to thicken, making them more difficult to cut and more inclined to exert pressure on the lateral skin at the sides of the nail plate, often becoming ingrown, painful, and infected.

According to a 2005 Cochrane Review, rates of regrowth after treatment were 34 percent to 50 percent. In 1959, Vandenbos and Bowers noted that patients who developed this problem tend to have an excessive amount of tissue at the sides of the affected nail. They theorized that weight-bearing caused the tissue to bulge over the sides of the nail, which can result in the growth of the toenail into the skin.

I want to note that an ingrown fingernail is similar in terms of how it happens. The usual causes of ingrown fingernails are due to improper trimming of the nail, an injury, and even nail-biting!  And like the toenail, sometimes the natural shape or thickness of the nail can make it more susceptible to becoming ingrown.

Whatever the cause, and regardless of the wether it’s an ingrown toenail or ingrown fingernail, it can be incredibly annoying to excruciatingly painful, and if left untreated, it can become infected.


Risks/Things You Should Know About Ingrown Toenails

It’s also important to note that 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. That’s just another reason to treat your diabetes.

Left untreated or undetected, an ingrown toenail can infect the underlying bone and lead to a serious bone infection. Complications can be especially severe if you have diabetes, which can cause poor blood flow and damage nerves in your feet. So a minor foot injury — a cut, scrape, corn, callus or ingrown toenail — may not heal properly and become infected.

A difficult-to-heal open sore (foot ulcer) may require surgery to prevent the decay and death of tissue (gangrene). Gangrene results from an interruption in blood flow to an area of your body.


Final Thoughts on Ingrown Toenails

  • An ingrown toenail, or onychogryphosis, may occur at any age and is one of the most common toenail problems. It can be a painful condition that can become infected if not properly cared for. Ingrown toenails usually affect the big toe, though other toes can also be affected.
  • Ingrown toenails are classified into three categories: mild (stage 1), moderate (stage 2), and severe (stage 3). Mild cases are characterized by nail-fold swelling, erythema, edema, and pain with pressure. Moderate cases are associated with increased swelling, drainage, infection, and ulceration of the nail fold. The most severe cases of ingrown toenail exhibit chronic inflammation and granulation, as well as marked nail-fold hypertrophy.
  • Some of the most common causes of an ingrown toenail include wearing shoes that crowd the toenails, such as heels or any shoes that are too tight, cutting toenails too short or not straight across, injuring the toenail, having unusually curved toenails, toe deformities, subungual exostosis (an outgrowth of bone from the tip of the toe), and use of isotretinoin in the treatment of severe acne.
  • Ingrown toenail symptoms include pain and tenderness in your toe along one or both sides of the nail, redness around your toenail, swelling of your toe around the nail, and infection of the tissue around your toenail.
  • To get rid of an ingrown toenail at home, you can soak or wash the foot, wash with Castile soap, try an apple cider vinegar wash, use dental floss under the nail, avoid high heels and tight shoes, and use essentials oils to help reduce inflammation and pain.

Resource

Dr. Axe is on a mission to provide you and your family with the highest quality nutrition tips and healthy recipes in the world. Draxe.com

Herbal Guide Staff

schillemi@thecompleteherbalguide.com

Stacey Chillemi is an entrepreneur, bestselling author, speaker & coach. She is the founder of The Complete Herbal Guide. She has empowered hundreds of thousands worldwide through her books, websites, e-courses, educational videos, and live events. You can Twitter me at @The_HerbalGuide.

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