Puneet Varma (Editor)

Onychogryphosis

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Specialty
  
dermatology

ICD-9-CM
  
703.8

ICD-10
  
L60.2

DiseasesDB
  
29441

Onychogryphosis

Onychogryphosis (also known as onychogryposis or ram's horn nails) is a hypertrophy that may produce nails resembling claws or a ram's horn.

Contents

Causes

Onychogryphosis may be caused by trauma or peripheral vascular disease, but most often secondary to self-neglect and failure to cut the nails for extended periods of time. This condition is most commonly seen in the elderly.

Treatment

Some recommend avulsion of the nail plate with surgical destruction of the nail matrix with phenol or the carbon dioxide laser, if the blood supply is good.

Epidemiology

Severe congenital onychogryphosis affecting all twenty nailbeds has been recorded in two families who exhibit the dominant allele for a certain gene. Congenital onychogryphosis of the fifth toe (the little toe) is fairly common, but asymptomatic and seldom brought to the attention of medical professionals. Rather, it is brought to the attention of manicurists who routinely file the clawed toenail flat.

References

Onychogryphosis Wikipedia