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  2. Surgical treatment of ingrown toenails - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgical_treatment_of...

    Some use "lateral onychoplasty," or "wedge resection," as the method of choice for ingrown toenails. A wide wedge resection, with a total cleaning (removal) of nail matrix, has a nearly 100% success rate. [citation needed] Some physicians will not perform a complete nail avulsion (removal) except under extreme circumstances. In most cases ...

  3. Koenen's tumor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koenen's_tumor

    Other treatment methods, which may be used in combination with surgical removal and/or with each other include: carbon dioxide-based laser vaporization; electrocauterization; shave excision of the tumor with phenolization (i.e. excision of the tumor’s protruding portion followed by treatment of the proximal perionych [i.e., skin around a nail ...

  4. Ingrown nail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingrown_nail

    An ingrown nail, also known as onychocryptosis (from Greek: ὄνυξ (onyx) 'nail' and κρυπτός (kryptos) 'hidden') is a common form of nail disease.It is an often painful condition in which the nail grows so that it cuts into one or both sides of the paronychium or nail bed.

  5. Sulfonated phenolics/sulfuric acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfonated_phenolics/...

    One clinical trial comparing Debacterol to Kenalog-in-Orabase and a no-intervention control group found that patients treated with sulfonated phenolics/sulfuric acid reported significantly better relief of symptoms compared to the other two groups three days after treatment. [4]

  6. How to Remove Nail Polish Without Nail Polish Remover

    www.aol.com/remove-nail-polish-without-nail...

    How to Remove Nail Polish with Rubbing Alcohol. If you don’t have any nail polish remover on hand, an alcohol-based product will work in a pinch, Brittney Boyce, founder of NAILSOFLA, tells us ...

  7. Disinfectant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinfectant

    Phenol is the standard, and the corresponding rating system is called the "Phenol coefficient". The disinfectant to be tested is compared with phenol on a standard microbe (usually Salmonella typhi or Staphylococcus aureus). Disinfectants that are more effective than phenol have a coefficient > 1. Those that are less effective have a ...

  8. Phenol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenol

    Phenol is so inexpensive that it also attracts many small-scale uses. It is a component of industrial paint strippers used in the aviation industry for the removal of epoxy, polyurethane and other chemically resistant coatings. [33] Due to safety concerns, phenol is banned from use in cosmetic products in the European Union [34] [35] and Canada ...

  9. Chloroxylenol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chloroxylenol

    Chloroxylenol, also known as para-chloro-meta-xylenol (PCMX), is a chlorine substituted phenol with a white to off-white appearance and a phenolic odor.. The discovery of chloroxylenol was the result of efforts to produce improved antiseptics that began at the end of the 1800s, when scientists gradually realized that more substituted and more lipophilic phenols are less toxic, less irritant ...