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Quick safety note

This guide is educational. It does not diagnose nail fungus or replace medical advice. Ask a qualified healthcare professional before starting a home routine if you have diabetes, poor circulation, thyroid disease, iodine allergy, immune suppression, pregnancy, breastfeeding, open skin, ulcers, or a painful nail.

Urgent warning signs

  • Spreading redness.
  • Pus or drainage.
  • Severe pain.
  • Fever with foot symptoms.
  • Open wounds, especially with diabetes.

Diagnosis warning signs

  • One dark streak that widens.
  • Bleeding under or around the nail without clear injury.
  • Rapid nail destruction.
  • A nail change that does not fit ordinary fungus.

Health conditions that raise risk

  • Diabetes.
  • Poor circulation.
  • Immune suppression.
  • Pregnancy.
  • Thyroid disease or iodine allergy.

What a clinician may do

  • Examine the nail and surrounding skin.
  • Test nail material for fungus.
  • Debride a thick nail safely.
  • Discuss prescription topical or oral options if appropriate.

Common questions

Should I test before treating?

Testing is helpful when the diagnosis is uncertain or treatment has failed.

Can I wait if it does not hurt?

Low-risk nail changes are often slow, but high-risk health conditions should lower the threshold for care.

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