Overview
what it is and why it mattersNail-bed injuries are the most common fingertip injury seen in the emergency department. The nail bed — the germinal matrix beneath the nail plate — is crushed, lacerated, or avulsed, often with a distal phalanx fracture (a Seymour fracture in skeletally immature patients). If not repaired carefully, scarring of the germinal matrix results in a permanently deformed, split, or absent nail.
The nail plate itself acts as a protective splint and, when intact, is often left in place or replaced over the repair.
Diagnosis
exam first, imaging secondClinical inspection under adequate lighting (with a digital block if needed). X-ray of the finger is mandatory to identify a distal phalanx fracture — an open fracture in association with a nail bed injury requires urgent irrigation and debridement.
Treatment Path
how care progresses at OSISubungual hematoma drainage
Isolated subungual hematomas without nail plate disruption: trephination (drilling a hole in the nail) relieves pressure.
Surgical Options at OSI
if non-operative care isn't enoughAny nail bed laceration, avulsion, or nail bed injury associated with distal phalanx fracture requires formal repair under magnification.
Providers Who Treat Nail-Bed Injury
sports-medicine teamDavid B. Templin, M.D.
Trent Twitero, M.D.
Further Reading
authoritative sourcesExternal patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:


