Topical steroids like methylprednisolone aceponate and tacrolimus ointment effectively treat chronic paronychia by reducing inflammation in 70-85% of cases over 6 weeks, outperforming antifungals. Surgical options like eponychial marsupialization with nail removal succeed in recalcitrant cases, addressing multifactorial irritant dermatitis rather than infection alone.
Methylprednisolone aceponate cured/improved 41/48 nails vs 30/57 with terbinafine, showing steroids superior for eczematous response. Betamethasone 17-valerate controls swelling and tenderness; apply twice daily for 3-6 weeks alongside irritant avoidance.
Tacrolimus 0.1% ointment outperformed betamethasone (statistically significant cure rates) by inhibiting dendritic cell migration and suppressing irritant reactions. Ideal for long-term use without skin thinning risks associated with prolonged steroids.
Broad-spectrum topicals (clotrimazole + steroid) address secondary candidal overgrowth in 2/18 carriers, though Candida eradication links weakly to cure. Use for 3 weeks when moisture exposure persists despite prevention.
Eponychial marsupialization drains nail fold, curing 70% with nail avulsion vs 41% without; en bloc proximal nail fold excision effective in 70% of irregular nail cases. Swiss roll technique preserves nail plate while promoting rapid healing.
Avoid wet work, chemicals, and allergens; cotton gloves under vinyl protect during exposure. Emollients lubricate cuticles; patient education prevents recurrence critical for sustained remission.
Chronic paronychia responds best to topical steroids/tacrolimus first-line, with surgery reserved for failures. Multifactorial management combining inflammation control, irritant avoidance, and barrier restoration yields consistent long-term success.
Topical steroids (methylprednisolone/betamethasone) twice daily for 3-6 weeks achieve 70-85% improvement; combine with emollients for barrier repair.
Steroid non-responders after 4 weeks; 0.1% ointment twice daily superior to betamethasone, safe long-term without atrophy risks.
Adjunctive only—terbinafine/itraconazole inferior to steroids; use if secondary Candida confirmed, but eradication rarely correlates with cure.
Recalcitrant after 6-12 weeks medical therapy; eponychial marsupialization ± nail avulsion (70% cure); en bloc excision for nail irregularities.
No prolonged water/chemical exposure; cotton-lined gloves for wet work; avoid acids/alkalis common in housekeepers/florists.
Triamcinolone injection for severe multifinger involvement; limited use due to pain/atrophy risks, reserved for refractory inflammation.
Marsupialization: 7-14 days exposure; full resolution 4-6 weeks; recurrence low (retreat with nail removal if needed).
Petrolatum-based applied frequently to cuticles/hands; prevents cracking, enhances all therapies.
Rarely—short-course oral steroids for acute flares; antibiotics only if bacterial superinfection (cellulitis).
Ongoing glove use, short
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 should be applied first to the affected nail fold after warm soaks, targeting…
Paronychia treatments require medical attention when home care fails after 2-5 days, pus-filled abscesses form,…