After a big toe fracture, the patient will first feel a painful pins and needles in the big toe area, followed by localized swelling and subcutaneous bruising. If the fracture site is misaligned, there will be deformity, positive local pressure pain, abnormal local movement or bone rubbing sound, and the patient will have limited movement of the interphalangeal joint of the big toe and will not be able to walk normally. An x-ray of the big toe can be taken and the fracture line can be seen. The fracture can be repositioned by manipulation and fixed with a toe plate to prevent greater dislocation of the fracture site, and oral bone-setting medications can be taken, such as fracture contusion powder, Yunnan Baiyao, and tendon activation tablets.