Occupational Nail Disorders

On this page

Occupational Nail Disorders - Workplace Nail Woes

  • Nail damage from workplace hazards: trauma, chemicals, infections, physical agents.
  • Trauma:
    • Acute: Subungual hematoma, nail avulsion.
    • Chronic: Onycholysis, ridging, koilonychia (e.g., mechanics, hairdressers).
  • Chemicals (Irritants/Allergens):
    • Paronychia, onycholysis, discoloration, allergic dermatitis (e.g., dental workers, beauticians using acrylates).
  • Infections (Fungal/Bacterial):
    • Tinea unguium (wet work), paronychia (minor trauma, moisture).
  • Physical Agents (Heat/Cold/Vibration):
    • Thermal injury, Raynaud's phenomenon, onycholysis.

⭐ Beauticians and dental workers are at high risk for allergic onycholysis and paronychia due to exposure to methacrylates in nail products and dental materials respectively.

Occupational Nail Disorders - Nail's Distress Signals

  • Onycholysis (Nail separation):
    • Causes: Trauma, wet work (detergents, alkalis), solvents, acrylates.
    • Seen in: Cleaners, hairdressers, healthcare, mechanics.
  • Paronychia (Nail fold inflammation):
    • Acute: Bacterial; often after trauma.
    • Chronic: Fungal (Candida), irritants; common in wet work.
    • Seen in: Bartenders, dishwashers, florists.
  • Nail Plate Abnormalities:
    • Beau's lines: Transverse depressions; due to systemic stress, severe dermatitis.
    • Koilonychia (Spoon nails): Solvents, petroleum products, trauma.
    • Pitting: Eczema, psoriasis (may be occupationally triggered/worsened).
  • Discoloration:
    • Green nails: Pseudomonas infection (secondary to onycholysis/wet work).
    • Brown/Black (Melanonychia): Trauma, chemicals (e.g., silver nitrate).
  • Allergic Contact Dermatitis (Nail Unit):
    • Common allergens: Acrylates (nail/dental pros), nickel, epoxy resins.
    • Presents as: Onycholysis, dystrophy, periungual eczema.

Illustrations of various nail diseases

⭐ Acrylate-induced allergic contact dermatitis in nail technicians or dental personnel often causes onycholysis and nail dystrophy, sometimes with fingertip eczema.

Occupational Nail Disorders - Nail Hazard Hotspots

  • Healthcare workers (esp. nurses, dentists): Paronychia, onychomycosis (wet work, antiseptics, latex allergy).
  • Hairdressers/Beauticians: Contact dermatitis, paronychia, nail plate discoloration (dyes, solvents, acrylates).
  • Cleaners/Domestic workers: Irritant contact dermatitis, paronychia, onycholysis (detergents, wet work).
  • Food handlers/Bartenders: Onychomycosis, paronychia (prolonged water exposure, trauma).
  • Mechanics/Construction workers: Traumatic nail injuries (onycholysis, subungual hematoma), contact dermatitis (oils, solvents, cement).
  • Agricultural workers: Onychomycosis, traumatic injuries, paronychia (pesticides, soil, moisture).

Vibration-induced nail changes (e.g., Raynaud's phenomenon affecting nail bed, pterygium inversum unguis) can be seen in workers using vibrating tools (e.g., jackhammer operators, construction).

Occupational Nail Disorders - Spotting & Stopping Trouble

  • Key Causes:
    • Trauma: Repetitive (tools, typing) → onycholysis, hematoma.
    • Chemicals: Irritants (solvents, wet work), Allergens (acrylates in dental/nail work; PPD in hairdressing) → dermatitis, paronychia, dystrophy.
    • Infections: Fungi (Candida, dermatophytes), Bacteria (Staph) → paronychia, onychomycosis (esp. wet work).
  • Common Signs: Onycholysis (nail separation), paronychia (fold inflammation), dystrophy (ridging, splitting), discoloration, Beau's lines (transverse grooves).
  • Prevention First:
    • PPE: Appropriate gloves (e.g., nitrile for chemicals, cotton-lined for prolonged use).
    • Barrier creams, good hand hygiene (mild cleansers, moisturizers).
    • Engineering controls: Ventilation, tool modification/ergonomics.
  • Management: Avoid/remove causative agent, treat infections (antifungals/antibiotics), topical corticosteroids for dermatitis, patient education.

⭐ > Allergic contact dermatitis to methacrylates (found in artificial nails, dental resins) is a common and significant cause of occupational nail dystrophy and chronic paronychia, particularly among nail technicians and dental personnel.

Chronic paronychia

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Trauma (acute/chronic) is the most common cause of occupational nail disorders.
  • Contact dermatitis (irritant/allergic, e.g., acrylates) causes onycholysis, paronychia, and nail dystrophy.
  • Wet work predisposes to chronic paronychia (bacterial/fungal).
  • Koilonychia (spoon nails) is linked to solvents and petroleum products.
  • Onycholysis results from irritants, trauma, psoriasis, or photo-onycholysis (e.g., tetracyclines).
  • Nail discoloration often indicates specific chemical exposures (e.g., nicotine - yellow; silver - blue-grey).
  • Vibration exposure can cause Raynaud's phenomenon, leading to nail dystrophy.
Rezzy AI Tutor

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, our AI tutor, to explain anything you didn't understand

Practice Questions: Occupational Nail Disorders

Test your understanding with these related questions

All are true about psoriasis except:

1 of 5

Flashcards: Occupational Nail Disorders

1/1

Dermatitis and burning of hands and fingers common among the pickle industry workers, who use their hands for handling chilly powder is also known as _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Dermatitis and burning of hands and fingers common among the pickle industry workers, who use their hands for handling chilly powder is also known as _____

hunan hand

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start For Free