Plant Medicine Eliminates Nail Fungus Completely
Treatment is generally successful, but treatment does not work for 20% to 25% of people with the condition. You may decide not to treat a fungal nail infection if your nail is discolored or damaged but not painful. If you have a fungal nail infection that causes quality-of-life problems, such as discomfort, pain, or embarrassment, you may decide to treat it. If you have a condition such as diabetes that might complicate a minor foot injury or infection, your doctor may suggest treating a fungal nail infection, even if it does not bother you.
Without treatment, fungal nail infections tend to get worse, infecting more of the nail or surrounding skin. Early treatment may shorten treatment time and increase your chances of being cured. Treatment for a fungal nail infection includes using medicines, taking steps to prevent the infection from returning, and possibly removing the affected nail. Antifungal medicine does not guarantee a cure, and antifungal pills can be expensive and have potentially dangerous side effects. Standard treatment for fungal nail infection includes one or a combination of the following.
Antifungal pills offer the best chance of a cure. But they require close monitoring for dangerous side effects and are generally reserved for moderate-to-severe or difficult-to-treat fungal nail infections. Pills include terbinafine, itraconazole, and fluconazole. Antifungal topical medicine are applied to the infected nail and surrounding areas of the skin. They may be used for mild-to-moderate infections and to help prevent an infection from returning or to prevent athlete’s foot from spreading to the nails. Topical medicines include terbinafine and ciclopirox. Topical medicines may not be as effective as oral medicines.
Removal of an infected nail is used for severe or recurring fungal nail infections. Combining nail removal with antifungal creams or pills is likely to be more effective than using one of these treatments alone. Nail removal is rarely necessary. In nonsurgical nail removal, a urea ointment is put on the nail, softening and dissolving it for easy removal. In surgical nail removal, the infected nail and tissue is fully removed or partially removed. A topical or oral antibiotic is necessary only when a bacterial infection has developed along with the fungal infection. Even after apparently successful treatment with antifungal pills, a fungal nail infection can return, either as a new infection or as regrowth of the original fungi.