TOE INJURY
Symptoms | When to call | Homecare Advice
Injury Definition
- Injury
the skin or nail of the toe.
- Injury to a bone, muscle, joint or ligament of the toe.
Types of Injuries
-
Cuts and Scratches: Superficial cuts (scratches) only extend partially through
the skin and rarely become infected. Deep cuts (lacerations) go through
the skin (dermis).
-
Abrasions or Scrapes: An area of superficial skin that has been
scraped off. Commonly occurs on the knuckles.
-
Bruises: Bruises (contusions) result from a direct blow or a
crushing injury; there is bleeding into the skin from damaged blood vessels
without an overlying cut or abrasion.
-
Fractures (broken bones)
-
Dislocations (bone out of joint)
-
Jammed Toe: The end of a straightened toe receives a
blow (usually from kicking something). The ligaments and tendons of the toe
are stretched and torn.
-
Crushed Toe: This injury most often results from a heavy
object falling on the toe. Usually the end of the toe receives a few cuts, a
blood blister or a bruise. Sometimes the nail is damaged. A fracture of the
bones inside the toe can occasionally occur.
-
Subungual Hematoma (blood under toenail): This medical term
is applied when a blood clot forms under the toenail. It is caused by a crush
injury to the tip of the toe. Some are only mildly painful and blood is
typically under < 50% of nailbed.
Others can be severely painful and throbbing, and these may need the pressure released
to relieve pain. The pressure can be released by putting a small hole through
the nail. With larger subungual hematomas, the toenail will usually fall
off. A new nail will grow back in 6 to 12 weeks.
-
Torn Nail: From catching it on something.
When are Stitches Needed?
- Any cut
that is split open or gaping probably needs sutures (stitches). Cuts longer
than 1/2 inch usually need sutures.
- A physician should evaluate any open wound that may need sutures
regardless of the time that has passed since the initial injury.
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Disclaimer: This information
is not intended be a substitute for professional medical advice. It is
provided for educational purposes only. You assume full responsibility
for how you choose to use this information.
Adult SelfCareNavigator. Copyright © 2000-2004
David Thompson, M.D. FACEP
Reviewed 8/2004
Revised 8/2004
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