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Occupational Nail Disorders

Occupational Nail Disorders

Occupational Nail Disorders

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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.

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