Ingrown toenail is a common clinical and surgical condition that occurs in adolescents, most often in the big toe. The main manifestations are redness and pain at the edge of the toenail, often accompanied by infection and bleeding pus, or, to put it bluntly, a nail embedded in the nail groove, causing what is often referred to as a nail infection. Repeated attacks of nail fungus can also lead to inflammatory granulation tissue proliferation, which in turn can aggravate the situation of ingrown nails. In summer, you can wear flip-flops, but in winter, you are in trouble, smothered in thick shoes and socks, painful and humid, and unbearable. There are many reasons for ingrown nails: improper nail trimming, trimming too deep or leaving nail spikes; wearing shoes with narrow tips for a long time; trauma caused by playing soccer; deformation of the nail plate caused by nail fungus and so on. But the real cause is actually the constant irritation and damage to the soft tissue at the edge of the toenail, the nail contour, from the deformed or overgrown toenail. Older patients with recurring ingrown nails have had the painful experience of having their nails removed. Indeed, the usual treatment for ingrown toenails by most doctors is surgical removal of the deformed toenail. With the toenail gone, of course, no further damage is done to the surrounding nail contour until the toenail grows back, the inflammation subsides, and the tissue is repaired. The method is simple and easy, but because the underlying cause is not eliminated, the toenail will grow out and re-embed the nail contour and lead to recurrence of the disease, so nail pulling is only a stopgap measure many patients often repeatedly pull the nail, but ingrown nails are always not eradicated some patients turn to the pedicurist, it is a symptom not the root cause. If the pedicure is not strictly disinfected or technically inappropriate, it can also infect the foot and nail fungus and even lead to new damage and aggravate the condition. So is there any other way to change this situation? The answer is of course yes. Through long-term clinical practice, we have come up with a solution for ingrown nails by giving the nail a “microplasty”, i.e., we remove the inflammatory lesions caused by the ingrown nail while removing a small portion of the nail plate and the nail bed, design the width of the nail bed, and reconstruct a new nail groove. Through this “microplasty” of the nail bed and the nail groove, the new nail grows in a good shape, the width becomes smaller, and the shaped nail groove is spacious so that the growth of the toenail is “unobstructed”, so that the “ingrown nail The “ingrown nail” will never come back. A large number of clinical patients have been treated. If you have been suffering from ingrown toenails for a long time, you should have your toes microscopically reshaped to get rid of them.