Paronychia treatments should be applied first to the affected nail fold after warm soaks, targeting the swollen, infected skin around the fingernail proximal edge where bacteria or fungi accumulate. Warm water soaks for 10-15 minutes precede topical antibiotics or steroids, softening skin and promoting drainage before medication application.
Soak infected finger in warm water (add antiseptic like chlorhexidine or povidone-iodine) 3-4 times daily for 15-20 minutes to reduce swelling and encourage pus drainage. Dry thoroughly afterward—first step for both acute and chronic cases before any topicals.
Apply mupirocin, bacitracin, or triple antibiotic ointment directly to red, swollen proximal nail fold 3-4 times daily post-soak for 5-10 days. Covers S. aureus; rub gently into cuticle area avoiding nail bed.
High-potency betamethasone 0.05% cream BID for 7-14 days on eczematous chronic paronychia after soaks. Targets irritated skin barrier around nail, reducing chronic swelling before antifungals.
Clotrimazole or nystatin cream TID up to 30 days on moist nail folds post-soak for candida-related paronychia. Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment BID alternative for steroid-resistant inflammation.
Incision at nail fold-p cuticle junction with #11 blade or needle if pus present—done first under digital block before antibiotics. Follow with soaks and topicals; antibiotics secondary unless cellulitis.
Paronychia treatments prioritize warm soaks first across affected nail fold, followed by topicals targeting proximal cuticle skin. Sequence ensures drainage, infection control, and barrier restoration systematically.
Warm water with chlorhexidine or povidone-iodine, 15-20 minutes 3-4x daily; promotes drainage without antibiotics initially.
Directly on swollen proximal nail fold and cuticle edge post-soak; thin layer, gentle massage 3-4x daily for 5-10 days.
Betamethasone on red, irritated nail fold skin BID for 7-14 days after drying post-soak; avoid open wounds.
Immediate for fluctuant abscess at nail fold junction; use #11 blade along cuticle, then soaks and topicals follow within 24 hours.
Clotrimazole TID on moist lateral nail folds post-soak up to 30 days; covers candida overgrowth from irritant exposure.
Soaks start immediately after I&D, then antibiotic ointment; follow-up 24-48 hours to ensure ongoing drainage.
Cephalexin 500mg TID or dicloxacillin 250mg QID for 5-7 days if cellulitis extends beyond nail fold after 48 hours topical failure.
Keep dry, moisturize post-wash, avoid water/chemicals first—enhances topical penetration on nail fold.
Soaks first, then systemic antibiotics like amoxicillin-clavulanate; avoid I&D unless abscess severe.
Topical steroids and antibiotics on nail fold without stopping medication; phenol matricectomy for recalcitrant cases.
Look, the bottom line is, in my 15 years working with infection management across UK…
Look, the bottom line is, in my 15 years leading dermatology teams across the UK,…
Paronychia treatments effectively help swollen cuticles by reducing inflammation, eliminating infection, and restoring the nail…
Paronychia treatments prevent recurring nail pain through consistent nail hygiene, barrier protection, moisture control, and…
Paronychia treatments require medical attention when home care fails after 2-5 days, pus-filled abscesses form,…
Topical steroids like methylprednisolone aceponate and tacrolimus ointment effectively treat chronic paronychia by reducing inflammation…