SPLINTER OR SLIVER
Symptoms | When to call | Homecare Advice
HOME CARE ADVICE FOR MINOR
SPLINTERS OR SLIVERS
- Tiny, Pain-Free Slivers:
If superficial slivers are numerous, tiny, and pain-free, they can be left in.
Eventually they will work their way out with normal shedding of the skin or
the body will reject them with a minor skin infection.
-
Tiny Plant Stickers: Plant stickers (e.g. stinging nettle),
cactus spines, or fiberglass spicules are difficult to remove. Usually they
break when pressure is applied with tweezers.
-
Wax Hair Remover: Warm up wax in your microwave for 10 seconds,
and apply a layer over the skin containing the stickers. Cover it with the cloth
strip that came with hair remover. Let it air dry for 5 minutes or accelerate
the process with a hair dryer. Then peel it off. It will remove most of them.
The others will usually work themselves out with normal shedding of the skin.
You can also try all-purpose white glue, but it is far less effective.
-
Tape: Another option is to lightly touch the area with packaging
tape or another very sticky tape.
-
Needle and Tweezers: Remove larger slivers with a needle and tweezers.
- Check the tweezers beforehand to be certain the ends (pickups)
meet exactly. (If they do not, bend them.) Sterilize the tools with rubbing
alcohol or a flame.
- Wash the skin surrounding the sliver briefly with soap and water
before trying to remove it. Don't soak the area if FB is wood. (Reason: can
cause swelling of the splinter)
- Use the needle to completely expose the large end of the sliver.
Use good lighting. A magnifying glass may help.
- Then grasp the end firmly with the tweezers and pull it out
at the same angle that it went in. Getting a good grip the first time is especially
important with slivers that go in perpendicular to the skin or those trapped
under the fingernail.
- For slivers under a fingernail, sometimes a wedge of the nail
must be cut away with fine scissors to expose the end of the sliver.
- Superficial horizontal slivers (where you can see all of it)
usually can be removed by pulling on the end. If the end breaks off, open the
skin with a sterile needle along the length of the sliver and flick the rest
out.
-
Antibiotic Ointment: Wash the area with soap and water before
and after removal. Apply an antibiotic ointment to the area once after removal
to reduce the risk of infection.
- Call Your Doctor If:
- You can't get it all out
- FB is removed, but pain becomes worse
- Starts to look infected (e.g. redness, pus, increasing pain)
- You become worse or develop any of the "Call Your Doctor"
symptoms.
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 8/2003
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