eMedicine Specialties > Clinical Procedures > Soft Tissue Procedures
Hand, Paronychia Drainage: Treatment & Medication
Updated: Nov 10, 2009
- Overview
- Treatment & Medication
- Multimedia
Anesthesia
- Depending on the technique used, the procedure may be performed without anesthesia in most patients. Drainage of more complex lesions is best accomplished with a digital nerve block using 1-2% plain lidocaine or mepivacaine.5
Equipment
- Sterile field
- Blunt probe
- Scalpel, No. 11 or 15 blade
- Scissors
- Large syringe (30 mL)
- ZEROWET splash shield (ZEROWET, Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif)
- Saline for irrigation
- Sterile gauze packing (plain or iodoform)
- Xeroform gauze
Positioning
- Both the patient and the physician should be comfortable.
- The patient should be supine, with the arm extended and the hand prone. A Mayo stand or carefully folded blanket on the bed can be used as armrests.
Technique
- Prepare a clean field, draping the finger and hand.
- The most simple and, often, least painful technique can be performed with only an 18-gauge needle. Anesthesia is not needed.
- The needle is positioned bevel up and laid horizontally on the nail surface. The needle is inserted at the lateral nail fold where it meets the nail itself, at the point of maximum fluctuance. The skin of the nail fold is lifted, releasing pus from the paronychia cavity. A gentle side-to-side motion may then be used to increase the size of the incision made by the needle, improving drainage. Since the area incised is made up of mostly necrotic tissue, this is often painless.
- Gentle pressure can be placed on the external skin to express any remaining pus from the paronychia. The cavity can then be irrigated with saline.
- A small piece of 1/4-in gauze or iodoform tape can be inserted into the paronychia cavity for continued drainage. The wound is subsequently covered with a sterile bandage.
- For a complex incision and drainage (which is not often necessary), administer anesthesia via digital nerve block. A tourniquet may be used on the involved finger to limit bleeding. In the case pictured below, the treating physician opted to use local anesthesia rather than a digital nerve block.
- Soaking the eponychium to soften it may facilitate drainage.5
- The increased pressure from the local injection may cause spontaneous evacuation of pus.
- If nail fold involvement is limited, gently advance the scalpel under the eponychium and elevate it, with the blade directed away from the nail bed. Damage to the nail bed can result in future growth abnormalities, such as ridging of the nail.6,11 The incision should be long enough to include the entire fluctuant area but no longer.1
- If an underlying nail deformity such as an ingrown nail is present or if pus appears under any part of the nail, elevate one third of the nail on the side of the infection and make a longitudinal cut, removing that third of the nail. Use a small Halstead clamp or fine scissors to free the involved eponychium. Paronychia of the toes is often due to ingrown nails; this is not usually true of paronychia of the fingers.
- For proximal nail involvement, some physicians make a semilunar incision proximal to the nail fold instead of directly incising the cuticle and potentially causing a permanent injury.5
- If the infection involves more than a limited eponychium and paronychial fold, or if the nail is freely mobile, removal of the entire nail may be necessary.12
- Irrigate the wound with saline under pressure (ie, large syringe with ZEROWET splash shield attached).
- Explore the wound with a blunt probe, clamps, or the blunt end of a cotton swab. Evacuate as much pus as possible.
- If a large pus collection is evacuated, pack the wound with plain or iodoform gauze tape for 24-48 hours to prevent reclosure and to assist drainage.11,5 Packing may not be necessary as long as the incision extends the length of the abscess.1
- Cover with Xeroform gauze and dress with dry 4 X 4 gauze.
- At 24-48 hours, the finger should be soaked and the packing removed. The patient can often do this himself or herself.
- Soak with saline for 15 minutes, 2-4 times daily, until healing occurs.12
- Antibiotic ointment or petroleum jelly may be used to keep the wound moist and prevent the bandaging from sticking to the wound.
- Specialist follow-up is generally not necessary, as long as healing is occurring.
Pearls
- Epinephrine is not recommended in performing a digital block.13
- The use of a tourniquet while performing the digital nerve block may aid in hemostasis.13,5
- Angle the scalpel away from the nail to avoid cutting the nail bed. Cutting the nail bed impacts later nail growth.6,11
- An adequate incision is needed to facilitate the drainage of the entire abscess cavity. Note that the scalpel is only used to make the skin incision. Another instrument, such as a cotton swab or hemostat, should be used to drain the deep cavity.
Complications
- Allergic reaction to the anesthetic
- Osteomyelitis
- Treatment failure due to inadequate length of incision or failure to consider an atypical infecting agent such as herpes simplex virus or Candida albicans
ICD-9CM Code
681.9 Paronychia
681.11 Paronychia, toe I & D
Thanks to Dr. Marouf at the Richmond Heights Emergency Department for his diligence in looking out for a case of paronychia drainage to photograph.
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References
Office surgery. In: Rakel R, ed. Textbook of Family Practice. 6th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: WB Saunders Company; 2002:663.
Hand. In: Marx J, ed. Rosen's Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice. Vol 1. 5th ed. St. Louis, Mo: Mosby; 2002:529-30.
Tosti A, Piraccini BM, Ghetti E, Colombo MD. Topical steroids versus systemic antifungals in the treatment of chronic paronychia: an open, randomized double-blind and double dummy study. J Am Acad Dermatol. Jul 2002;47(1):73-6. [Medline].
Opal S, Petropoulos P, Mikolich D, Ferri F. Ferri's Clinical Advisor: Instant Diagnosis and Treatment. Philadelphia, Pa: Mosby; 2008:667.
Roberts JR, Hedges JR. Incision and drainage. In: Clinical Procedures in Emergency Medicine. 4th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: WB Saunders Company; 2004:738-41.
Rockwell PG. Acute and chronic paronychia. Am Fam Physician. Mar 15 2001;63(6):1113-6. [Medline]. [Full Text].
Noble J. Textbook of Primary Care Medicine. 3rd ed. St. Louis, Mo: Mosby; 2001:1167-68.
Shaw J, Body R. Best evidence topic report. Incision and drainage preferable to oral antibiotics in acute paronychial nail infection?. Emerg Med J. Nov 2005;22(11):813-4. [Medline].
Clark DC. Common acute hand infections. Am Fam Physician. Dec 1 2003;68(11):2167-76. [Medline]. [Full Text].
Rigopoulos D, Larios G, Gregoriou S, Alevizos A. Acute and chronic paronychia. Am Fam Physician. Feb 1 2008;77(3):339-46. [Medline].
Hand infections. In: Canale ST, ed. Campbell's Operative Orthopaedics. Vol 4. 10th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Mosby; 2003:3810-13.
Halstead Residents of the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Chen H, Sonnenday C, Lillemoe K. Manual of Common Bedside Surgical Procedures. 2000:361.
Gmyrek R. Local anesthesia and regional nerve block anesthesia. eMedicine from WebMD. Updated August 7, 2009. Available at emedicine.medscape.com/article/1127490-overview. Accessed December 22, 2007.
Keywords
paronychia drainage, drain paronychia, paronychia, paronychial infection, inflammation of nail fold, infection of the hand, finger infection, toe infection, onychia lateralis, onychia periungualis, digital nerve block, incision and drainage, I & D, felon, ingrown nail, subungual hematoma, subungual abscess, onychocryptosis, closed-space infections, fingertip pulp, hand infections, osteomyelitis, tenosynovitis, septic arthritis, infection, infection, nail bed infection, nailbed infection




















Treatment & Medication: Hand, Paronychia Drainage