Natali KuchukhidzeDoctor-podologist

Ingrown toenail: why waiting makes it worse — and how a bracket can cancel surgery

“I’ll wait a bit — it will pass” is how most ingrown toenail stories begin. Unfortunately, it almost never passes on its own: the nail edge cuts deeper into the soft tissue, and every step drives the process on.

What is actually happening

The nail is a hard plate; the skin around it is soft. When the nail corner cuts into the skin, the body treats it as a foreign object: inflammation, redness and swelling follow. At this stage a granuloma — overgrown “proud flesh” — often appears.

The classic mistake at this point is cutting the corner even shorter. The trimmed edge grows straight back into the skin — and the circle closes.

Why waiting is risky

  • The inflammation deepens and can turn into a purulent infection;
  • Pain changes the way you walk — pressure shifts to other areas;
  • With diabetes, even a small wound carries the risk of serious complications.

The later treatment starts, the more time and visits it takes. Caught early, one or two procedures are often enough.

Orthonyxia: treatment without surgery

A bracket is a thin titanium construction fixed to the nail that gently, continuously corrects its growth direction — much like braces straighten teeth.

The procedure is painless and you can walk immediately. Adjustments happen every few weeks until the nail returns to a healthy path.

In our practice there was a case where a patient already had surgery scheduled — bracket treatment cancelled it. The nail regained its shape, and the patient regained pain-free walking.

When to see a specialist

If the nail edge hurts, or the skin is red or swollen — it is time. If you notice discharge or a granuloma, do not postpone the visit.

More about ingrown toenail treatment →

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