Surgical treatment of ingrown toenails
Image:Reene [ingrown nail postop.jpg|thumb|300px|right|A toe post wedge resection with an image of the removed nail]
Surgical treatments of ingrown toenails include a number of different options. If conservative treatment of a minor ingrown toenail does not succeed or if the ingrown toenail is severe, surgical management by a podiatrist is recommended. The initial surgical approach is typically a partial avulsion of the nail plate, known as a wedge resection, or a complete removal of the toenail. If the ingrown toenail recurs despite this treatment, destruction of the germinal matrix with phenol is recommended. As an alternative, one may use 10% sodium hydroxide which is less toxic or trichloroacetic acid which may give faster healing time. Antibiotics typically are not needed when surgery is performed.
Wedge resection
[Image:Ingrown1.jpg|A resected wedge from the left side of the left big toe, shown to scale|thumb][Image:ToeGN.jpg|thumb|Toe healing process after nail removal]
The physician will perform a wedge resection in which the nail growing into the skin along the edge is cut away ; the offending nail piece is pulled out and any infection is surgically drained. This process is also referred to as a simple surgical ablation; but it is not permanent. The entire procedure is performed in a surgeon's office, usually in about a half-hour, depending upon the extent of the problem. It is typically an out-patient procedue: the patient goes home the same day and recovery time varies from two to several weeks barring complications such as infection. As follow-up, the doctor may prescribe an oral or topical antibiotic and/or special soaking-baths for an interval of time after surgery. Some surgeons use the procedure lateral onychoplasty, a wide wedge resection, as the method of choice. It results in total cleaning avulsion of the nail matrix, and has a nearly 100% success rate.
And some practitioners avoid complete/total nail avulsion except for extreme circumstances: they may remove both sides of a toenail, then coat the nail matrix on both sides with a chemical, usually phenol, to prevent re-growth. This leaves most of the nail intact but ensures that ingrowing nail will not recur. There is possible failure of this procedure if the nail matrix is not coated, allowlng it to re-grow. The underlying condition can become symptomatic if the nail grows back too quickly: the nail matrix could be growing a nail that's too wide, thick, or too curved, or is otherwise irregular. Further, the toe is subject to injury by concussion, twisting walk-motions, tight socks, or because the nail is growing incorrectly. This prospect of continued injury can mean chronic nail ingrowing, and chronic pain. The solution is usually edge avulsion with the adjunct procedure of phenolisation.
Avulsion
In case of recurrence after complete removal—and if the patient didn't feel pain before inflammation occurred—the condition may likely be onychia, which is often confused with ingrown nail disease. Complete removal of the whole nail may be indicated and is a simple procedure. Local anaesthetic is injected and the nail is removed quickly by pulling it outward from the toe. This procedure is less complex than the wedge resection and can typically be performed in about 20 minutes. The patient can function normally soon after the procedure and most discomfort resolves in a few days. Typically, the nail-less toe does not look like a normal toe. Nail varnish or fake nails can be applied to the area to provide a more normal appearance.The nail may grow back however; and it can become ingrown again. It may grow back too wide, too thick, or deformed, or it can be injured by concussion; all which can result in chronic ingrowing nails, causing chronic pain. Accordingly, the surgeon may coat the nail matrix with a chemical, intending that none of the nail will grow back again. This is known as a permanent or full nail avulsion—also known as full matrixectomy, phenolisation, or full phenol avulsion. In a few cases the first procedure is not successful and has to be repeated. Podiatrists routinely warn patients of the possibility of regrowth.