• What anesthesia is used for ingrown toenail surgery?

I will have ingrown toenail surgery. What anesthesia is used for ingrown toenail surgery?

25 Answers

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Newark, NJ

Hello, Thank you for your question. We you have to evaluate you and take foot x-rays if needed. Please call our office 973-817-9577 or on our portal drtotten.com for an appointment.
Thank you

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Ocean, NJ

Hi, I usually do this procedure in the office with local anesthesia. That means you are fully awake and the toe gets a (temporarily very painful) injection. Once the injection is in, the removal is painless and you are able to walk out in normal shoes. Infrequently, patients ask for light sedation in an operating room.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Hackettstown, NJ

Local anesthesia usually. Google Onyfix, is a different way to treat and cure ingrown nails.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Newton, NJ

Local anesthesia is used. There are a few different medications that are commonly used. They are Lidocaine and Marcaine. Sometimes they can be used with epinephrine mixed in.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Wheaton, IL

Local anesthetic

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Solon, OH

Local anesthesia, much like having dental work done, the area is numbed with a shot of local anesthetic, usually Lidocaine or Marcaine.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • SPRINGFIELD, MO

Local anesthetic in the toe. Usually lidocaine or marcaine or a mix of both.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Hartford, Connecticut

Normally local anesthesia in the office.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Independence, MO

Most ingrown toenails are done in an office setting. I do a lot with just local anesthesia. Meaning I numb up the toe and then remove the offending nail edge. It takes 5-10 minutes and people are very happy.

Missy Journot

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Vega Baja, PR

Usually this procedure is done in the office with local anesthesia. It should take 10-20 minutes total.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Brooklyn, NY

Typical local block consists of 3 cc of 2% Lidocaine plain. If the doctor wants to control bleeding, he could use a mixture of 1.5 cc of 2% Lidocaine plain mixed with 1.5 cc of 2% Lidocaine with epinephrine.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Philadelphia, Pa

Local Anesthesia

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Houston, TX

Local anesthetic

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Thousand Oaks, CA

Hello,

It is local anesthesia usually lidocaine the same as a dentist uses for a tooth filling.

Dr. Patel

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Chicago, IL

As a general rule a local anesthetic injection is utilized for ingrown toenail surgery.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Pottstown, PA

That depends on the practitioner. I typically administer 1% Xylocaine plain with a simple digital block.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • St Petersburg, FL

Simply a local novocaine shot into the toe usually

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Englewood, NJ

Local anesthesia is administered at the base of the affected toe. You can walk out of the office and resume all your activities without restriction

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Los Angeles, CA

Typically local anesthesia, but at times sedation can be used

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Manhasset, NY

Typically, ingrown toenail surgery in the office is performed with local anesthesia/Lidocaine and sometimes marcaine via a needle to the toe. Some severe ingrown toenails require surgery in the hospital or an ambulatory surgery suite, and they include the same local anesthesia plus sedation, a sleep-like state during which you can move and talk, but you do not remember the surgery.

  • Anesthesiologist
  • Tallahassee, Florida

There are several types. The least intensive would be a toe block with 1% lidocaine

  • Anesthesiologist
  • Camden, NJ

Peripheral nerve block & MAC or general anesthesia.

  • Surgeon
  • Ansonia, CT

Normally, local anesthetic with sedation.

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Las Vegas, NV

It depends on the doctor's preference. Usually we use Lidocaine or Marcaine/Bupivicane for local anesthesia

  • Podiatrist (Foot and Ankle Specialist)
  • Newark, DE

A local anesthetic is usually sufficient for addressing an Ingrown toenail

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