The physician will perform a wedge resection in which the nail growing into the skin along the edge is cut away (
ablated); the offending nail piece is pulled out and any infection is surgically drained. This process is also referred to as a simple surgical ablation; but it is not permanent (i.e., the nail will re-grow from the matrix). The entire procedure is performed in a surgeon's office, usually in about a half-hour (+/-), depending upon the extent of the problem. It is typically an out-patient procedue: the patient goes home the same day and recovery time varies from two to several weeks barring complications such as infection. As follow-up, the doctor may prescribe an
oral or
topical antibiotic and/or special soaking-baths for an interval of time after surgery. Some surgeons use the procedure
lateral onychoplasty, a wide wedge resection, as the method of choice. It results in total cleaning avulsion (removal) of the nail matrix, and has a nearly 100% success rate. And some practitioners avoid complete/total nail avulsion (removal) except for extreme circumstances: they may remove both sides of a toenail (even if only one side is ingrown), then coat the nail matrix on both sides with a chemical, usually
phenol (carbolic acid), to prevent re-growth. This leaves most of the nail intact but ensures that ingrowing nail will not recur. There is possible failure of this procedure if the nail matrix is not coated, allowlng it to re-grow. The underlying condition can become symptomatic if the nail grows back too quickly: the nail matrix could be growing a nail that's too wide, thick, or too curved, or is otherwise irregular. Further, the toe is subject to injury by concussion, twisting walk-motions, tight socks (including pressure stockings), or because the nail is growing incorrectly (likely too wide). This prospect of continued injury can mean chronic nail ingrowing, and chronic pain. The solution is usually edge avulsion with the adjunct procedure of phenolisation. ==Avulsion==