Dental Floss

In mild cases, a variant of the packing technique utilizes a piece of dental floss placed under the nail corner to separate it from the nail fold. This procedure does not require local anesthesia

Treatment Type: Lifestyle

Treatment Class: N/A

Treatment Modality: N/A

Review Summary

3.0

1 Reviews

Preferred by 0 Reviewers

Based on the single review provided, a medical professional suggests that using dental floss as a treatment for ingrown toenails is recommended in literature. However, the reviewer has not personally tried this method, so its effectiveness cannot be confirmed from this limited information. More reviews and ratings would be needed to comprehensively assess the efficacy of using dental floss to treat ingrown toenails.

This summary was generated by users' reviews

Breakdown by Category

Each categories are rated on a 1–5 scale, with 5 being the most favorable outcome and 1 being the least. These scores are averaged across all user reviews to provide a clear sense of how this treatment typically performs in each area.

Cost
5.0
1 = Very Expensive 5 = Very Affordable

5.0

Very Affordable
Relief Speed
5.0
1 = No Relief 5 = Immediate Relief

5.0

Immediate Relief
Side Effects
4.0
1 = Intolerable Effect 5 = No Effect

4.0

Mild Effect
Treatment Line
5.0
1 = Third-line or more 5 = First-line

5.0

First-line

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3.0

1 Reviews
5
0%
4
0%
3
100%
2
0%
1
0%

AI Summary of User Experiences

Not medical advice.

Based on the single review provided, a medical professional suggests that using dental floss as a treatment for ingrown toenails is recommended in literature. However, the reviewer has not personally tried this method, so its effectiveness cannot be confirmed from this limited information. More reviews and ratings would be needed to comprehensively assess the efficacy of using dental floss to treat ingrown toenails.

Reviews

Filter by reviewer type Pro

Cost
Very Expensive
$1000+
Expensive
$501 to $1000
Moderate Cost
$101 to $500
Affordable
$25 to $100
Very Affordable
$25
Relief Speed
No Relief
No noticeable improvement
Slow Relief
Several days to weeks
Moderate Relief
Within 1 - 3 days
Fast Relief
Within hours
Immediate Relief
Within minutes
Side Effect
Intolerable Side Effect
Caused treatment to stop or required hospitalization
Severe Side Effect
Difficult to tolerate, may require intervention
Moderate Side Effect
Noticeable, but manageable
Mild Side Effect
Minor, not bothersome
No Side Effect
Without any adverse effects
Treatment Line
Third-line or more
Used after second-line failed or multiple prior treatment
Second-line
Used after first-line treatment failed or was unsuitable
First-line
First treatment tried
Dr. Curbside

Dr. Curbside

Verified
Physician • Emergency Medicine • How doctors think about decisions — and what real-world experiences add
2 months ago
A commonly recommended technique where floss is placed under the nail edge to lift it and create a barrier from the skin. In theory (and in some literature), it can be effective for mild cases. Personally, I’ve had limited success getting it positioned well enough to make a difference. Worth trying early on, but can be tricky to do and not always reliable.
#VeryAffordable #ImmediateRelief #MildEffect #First-line #Rescue/EmergencyUse