Foreign Body Beneath Nail

CHAPTER 141


Foreign Body Beneath Nail


Presentation


The patient complains of a paint chip or wooden sliver under the nail. There may be only mild discomfort, but frequently there is severe throbbing pain. Most subungual foreign bodies are completely visible and are lodged under the distal portion of the nail. Occasionally, a wooden sliver will be large and deeply embedded over the proximal germinal matrix.


Often the patient has unsuccessfully attempted to remove the foreign body, which has broken off and could not be grabbed using household tweezers.


What To Do:


Paint Chip


image Without anesthesia, remove the overlying nail by shaving it with a No. 15 scalpel blade (Figure 141-1). This is done by using light strokes in a proximal to distal direction. This technique gradually creates a U-shaped defect in the nail, exposing most of the paint chip and releasing it from beneath the nail.


image


Figure 141-1 Paint chip removal. This technique creates a U-shaped defect that releases the paint chip foreign body.


image Cleanse remaining debris with normal saline, and trim the nail edges smooth with scissors.


image Provide tetanus prophylaxis if necessary (see Appendix H), and then dress the area with antibiotic ointment and a bandage strip.


Sliver


image For small slivers, it may be possible to take a 23- or 25-gauge needle and push it into the exposed end of the splinter, angling the needle up toward the distal nail plate. Then, when the needle is firmly lodged in the splinter (while maintaining the same angle), the sliver can be pulled out by using the needle tip for traction (Figure 141-2).


image


Figure 141-2 Sliver removal. Angle the tip of the scissors blade up into the nail plate, not down and into the nail bed.


image When presented with a large or friable splinter, a more extensive excision of an overlying nail wedge is required. Therefore you will need to perform a digital block (see Appendix B).


image Slide a small (but strong) straight iris scissors between the nail and nail bed on both sides of the sliver and cut out the overlying V-shaped wedge of nail (Figure 141-3). The point of the V should be at or near the proximal tip of the splinter. The wedge of nail plate will fall away, and the exposed sliver can be easily picked away.


image


Figure 141-3 Sliver removal. Push a 23- or 25-gauge needle into the exposed end of the splinter, angling the needle up toward the distal nail plate. Then, when the needle is firmly lodged in the splinter (while maintaining the same angle), the sliver can then be pulled out by using the needle tip for traction.


image Cleanse any remaining debris with normal saline, and trim the fingernail until the corners are smooth.


image Provide tetanus prophylaxis (see Appendix H) if needed.


image Dress with antibiotic ointment and a bandage. Have the patient redress the area two to three times daily until healed and keep the fingernail trimmed close.


What Not To Do:


image Do not run the tip of the scissors into the nail bed while sliding it under the fingernail (instead angle the tip up into the undersurface of the nail). Damage to the germinal matrix could potentially lead to a permanent nail plate deformity.


image Do not routinely prescribe antibiotics. When the foreign body has been removed, there is little risk for infection.


Aug 11, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Foreign Body Beneath Nail

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