Freedom from structured footwear may be more comfortable but exposing your feet indiscriminately to the elements can set you up as a host to some nasty bacteria.
Toe pain from bacterial toenail infection occurs when your toenail is traumatized from a contusion (a bruise under the nail on the nail bed), repeated trauma to the nail from chronic fungal infection or a crush injury causes a break in the nail or skin. All of these conditions allow bacteria to enter cracks or tears in the skin and cause inflammation.
Bacterial infection can lead to an abscess under the nail causing toenail discoloration of green, yellow or brown. Further complications from an untreated bacterial infection include more serious bone infection.
You need to know when toe pain and a discolored toenail is a sign of serious bacterial toenail infection that should be treated urgently. Know what you should expect from your physician to successfully treat it and the medical complications that can develop from delaying care.
Chronic bacterial toenail infection either doesn't get better right away or it keeps coming back. It can't be treated with anti-fungal creams, over the counter treatment or home remedy. Antibiotics must be taken to cure the infection. The antibiotic treatment can be topical, taken orally or in serious cases, where the infection has spread to the bone, IV antibiotics may be required.
You should expect treatment to include:
All infections that result in cellulitis (bone infection) are potentially threatening to the viability of the toe. Some bacteria are more resistant than others, but it doesn't change the workup or the treatment process of dealing with a soft tissue or bone infection.
Bacterial infections can spread rapidly. Without proper treatment you may lose your nail permanently. In extreme cases of deep infection reaching the bone, if the infection is not treated quickly, and with the right antibiotics, you run the risk of amputation. If you have diabetes, there is a risk of bacterial infection spreading to deeper tissues and bones or into the bloodstream and other parts of the body that can result in loss of fingers, toes or limbs.
Be sure to contact your doctor when:
Taking action quickly with the right medical professional is key to faster healing and recovery.