Milady: Chapter 10
nail psoriasis
A noninfectious condition that affects the surface of the natural nail plate causing tiny pits or severe roughness on the surface of the nail plate
nail pterygium
Abnormal condition that occurs when the skin is stretched by the nail plate; usually caused by serious injury, such as burns, or an adverse skin reaction to chemical nail enhancement products.
hangnail
Also known as agnail; a condition in which the living tissue surrounding the nail plate splits or tears.
onychophagy
Also known as bitten nails; result of a habit of chewing the nail or chewing the hardened skin surrounding the nail plate.
plicatured nail
Also known as folded nail; a type of highly curved nail usually caused by injury to the matrix, but may be inherited
onychocryptosis
Also known as ingrown nails; nail grows into the sides of the tissue around the nail.
pincer nail
Also known as trumpet nail; increased crosswise curvature throughout the nail plate caused by an increased curvature of the matrix. The edges of the nail plate may curl around to form the shape of a trumpet or sharp cone at the free edge.
leukonychia spots
Also known as white spots; whitish discolorations of the nails, usually caused by injury to the matrix area; not related to the body's health or vitamin deficiencies.
onychosis
Any deformity or disease of the natural nails.
paronychia
Bacterial inflammation of the tissues surrounding the nail causing pus, swelling, and redness, usually in the skin fold adjacent to the nail plate.
nail disorder
Condition caused by an injury or disease of the nail unit.
bruised nails
Condition in which blood clot forms under the nail plate, causing a dark purplish spot. These discolorations are usually due to small injuries to the nail bed.
melanonychia
Darkening of the fingernails or toenails; may be seen as a black band within the nail plate extending from the base to the free edge.
healthy nails
Firm but flexible. The surface is shiny, smooth, and unspotted with no wavy ridges, pits, or splits. Whitish and translucent in appearance, with the pinkish color of the nail bed showing through.
onychomycosis
Fungal infection of the natural nail plate.
splinter hemorrhages
Hemorrhages caused by trauma or injury to the nail bed that damage the capillaries and allow small amounts of the blood flow.
onychia
Inflammation of the nail matrix, followed by shedding of the natural nail.
onycholysis
Lifting of the nail plate from the nail bed without shedding, usually beginning at the free edge and continuing toward the lunula area.
tinea pedis
Medical term for fungal infections of the feet; red, itchy rash of the skin on the bottom of the feet and/or in between the toes, usually found between the fourth and fifths toe.
discolored nails
Nails turn a variety of colors; may indicate surface staining, a systemic disorder, or poor blood circulation
eggshell nails
Noticeably thin, white nail plates that are more flexible than normal and can curve over the free edge.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
One of the several common bacteria that can cause nail infection.
pyogenic granuloma
Server inflammation of the nail in which a lump of red tissue grows up from the nail bed to the nail plate.
onychorrhexis
Split or brittle nails that have a series of lengthwise ridges giving a rough appearance to the surface of the nail plate.
onychomadesis
The separation and falling off of a nail plate from the nail bed; affects fingernails and toenails.
ridges
Vertical lines running through the length of the natural nail plate that are caused by uneven growth of the nails, usually the result of normal aging.
Beau's lines
Visible depressions running across the width of the natural nail plate; usually a result of major illness or injury that has traumatized the body.
onychosis1
any deformity, disease
onychophagy1
bitten nails
nail infection
cannot offer treatment and advice for
warm, moist, and dark
conditions that fungal organisms favor for growth
pincer nail
dramatically increased curvature
onychomycosis1
fungal infection
onychia1
inflammation - shredding
onychocryptosis1
ingrown nails
onycholysis1
lifting of nail plate - without shredding, free edge to lunula
fungus
parasites that cause infection on hands and feet
onychomadesis1
separation and falling off - fingernails and toes
nail or skin that is infected, inflamed, broken, or swollen
situation in which a nail service should not be performed
onychorrhexis1
split, brittle, lengthwise ridges
two ways to help a client with a nail disorder
tell the clients that they may have a disorder and refer them to a physician, if required -or- cosmetically improve certain nail plate conditions if the problem is cosmetic and not a medical condition or disorder
ingrown nail
treat if no sign of discharge or pus
two common causes of onycholysis
when nails are filed too aggressively, nail enhancements are removed improperly