A systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomised controlled trials of surgical treatments for ingrown toenails part II: healing time, post‐operative complications, pain, and participant satisfaction

Author:

Exley Victoria1,Jones Katherine2,O'Carroll Grace1,Watson Judith1,Backhouse Michael2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. York Trials Unit Department of Health Sciences University of York York UK

2. Warwick Clinical Trials Unit Warwick Medical School University of Warwick CV4 7AL Coventry UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhen performing nail surgery, clinicians must choose from a multitude of procedures and variations within each procedure. Much has been published to guide this decision making, but there are a lack of up to date robust systematic reviews to assess the totality of this evidence.MethodsFive databases (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Web of Science and CENTRAL) and two registers (Clinicaltrials.gov and ISRCTN) were searched to January 2022 for randomised trials evaluating the effects of a surgical intervention(s) for ingrown toenails. Two independent reviewers screened records, extracted data, assessed risk of bias and certainty of evidence. Data on co‐primary outcomes of symptom relief and symptomatic regrowth were presented in our first paper. This paper presents data for the secondary outcomes and further discussion.ResultsOf 3,928 records identified, 36 randomised trials were included in the systematic review. Healing time appears to be reduced with shorter application of phenol. A reduced healing time was also apparent was with the addition of curettage, although this may also increase the risk of post‐operative bleeding and pain. Post operative bleeding was also reportedly lower in people who received local anaesthetic with epinephrine but no tourniquet. Use of phenol with nail bed excision may decrease the risk of infection. Lower pain scores were reported when using partial matrixectomy and surgical interventions with phenol. Shorter duration of pain was reported with phenolisation and wedge resection. Participant satisfaction was high overall.ConclusionThis second paper reports secondary outcomes from a robust systematic review of randomised trials on surgical treatment of ingrown toenails. Despite the large volume of clinical trials conducted on the topic, few clinical conclusions can be drawn due to the poor quality of these studies. Further high‐quality clinical trials are needed to answer fundamental questions in the surgical treatment of ingrown toenails.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference69 articles.

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2. Text Atlas of Podiatric Dermatology

3. Podiatry Co.A Demographic Evaluation of UK Podiatry Services. (2016). Accessed 11 Sep 2019.

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1. Surgical interventions for ingrown toenail;Foot and Ankle Surgery;2023-12

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