Nail Bed Injuries
What is involved with nail bed injuries?
Injuries to the nail are often associated with damage to other
structures that are in the same location. These include fractures of the
bone (distal phalanx), and/or cuts of the nailbed, fingertip skin
(pulp), tendons that straighten or bend the fingertip, and nerve
endings.
What causes nail bed injuries?
Many result from crush injuries after getting the fingertip caught in
a door. Any type of pinching, crushing, or sharp cut to the fingertip
may result in injury to the nail bed.
Presentation of nail bed injuries
Simple crushes of the fingertip may result in a very painful
collection of blood (hematoma) under the nail. More severe injuries can
result in cracking of the nail into pieces, or tearing off of pieces of
the nail and/or fingertip, and possible injuries to the adjacent
structures.
Diagnosis of nail bed injuries
An accurate history of the cause of the injury should be obtained.
X-rays are recommended to look for associated fractures that may require
treatment. The full extent of the injury may not be evident until
adequate anesthesia (usually local) is given and the nail is examined
with magnification. Other medical conditions that may affect healing
should be discussed with your physician.
Treatment of nail bed injuries
Restoring the normal anatomy of the nail and surrounding structures
is the goal of treatment. Simple hematomas are drained by making a small
hole in the nail in order to relieve the pressure and provide pain
relief. Straightforward cuts are repaired to put the parts back where
they belong.Repairing the nail bed to which the fragments of bone are
attached usually restores alignment of many fractures of the fingertip.
Larger fragments of bone may need to be pinned or require splinting to
heal the fracture. Missing areas of nail bed can be grafted from the
same finger or from other digits. Tendon injury may require splinting or
pinning. Local flaps of skin may be used to replace missing skin, or the
open area of skin may be allowed to just heal on its own, or covered
with a skin graft.
Prognosis
The final appearance and function of the nail and surrounding
structures depends on the ability to restore the normal anatomy. If the
injury is sharp and can be repaired, a normal nail is likely. If there
is more severe crushing of the nail bed, then there is a greater
likelihood of nail bed scarring and subsequent deformity of the nail. If
the germinal matrix (crescent-shaped zone at the base of the nail bed
from which the nail grows) is injured, there will likely be a deformity
of the nail as it grows. The function of the fingertip also depends on
the extent of injury to structures other than the nail. It normally
takes 3-6 months for the nail to grow from the cuticle to the tip of the
finger.
Surgical Reconstruction
Loss of part or all of the nail bed can be reconstructed with grafts
from other digits. Grafts may be taken from the nail bed of a toe to
prevent further injury or deformity of the fingers. The most common
graft is a split-thickness graft to reconstruct missing nail bed.

Figure 1: The anatomy of the nail bed and surrounding
structures.

Figure 2: The anatomy of the nail bed and surrounding structures
from a lateral view.
© 2006 American Society for Surgery of the Hand
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