Skin & Soft Tissue: Acute Paronychia
Acute Paronychia
Definition
- Definition: Acute Inflammation of the Proximal & Lateral Nail Folds
- May Have Associated Abscess
- Most Common in Finger Nails Although Also Seen in Toenails
- Most Common Organism: Staphylococcus aureus
Risk Factors
- Most Common Risk Factor: Minor Skin Breakdown (Occupational Exposure Common)
- Manicures
- Artificial Nails
- Nail Biting
- Thumb-Sucking
- Hangnails
- Ingrown Toenails
Presentation
- Erythema & Swelling of the Proximal & Lateral Nail Folds
- May See a Fluctuant Abscess
Treatment
- Inflammation without Abscess: Warm Compress & Topical Antibiotics
- If Fails: Oral Antibiotics (Dicloxacillin or Cephalexin)
- Abscess: Incision & Drainage
- Incision: Lift the Nail Bed at the Lateral Nail Fold & Make a Longitudinal Lateral Incision Parallel to the Nail
- Consider Oral Antibiotics if Severe or Immunosuppressed
Chronic Paronychia
- Definition: Inflammation of the Nail Folds Lasting ≥ 6 Weeks
- Most Common in Patients with Chronically Wet Hands (Dishwashers, Bartenders, Housekeepers)
- Chronic Inflammation Can Cause Rounding of the Nail Folds to Expose the Nail Groove & Lose the Protective Seal
- Candida May Be Present but Role Uncertain
- Treatment: Topical Steroids
- Addition of Antifungals May Assist in Management
- Consider Nail Removal If Steroids Fails
Acute Paronychia 1
Acute Paronychia 2
References
- Craig C. Wikimedia Commons. (License: Public Domain)
- Ashashyou. Wikimedia Commons. (License: CC BY-SA-4.0)