What about suture granulomas after nail cancer surgery?

The treatment of granuloma of postoperative suture of nail cancer depends on the severity of granuloma, if it is not serious, it can generally subside by itself, while if it is serious, it can be treated with local anti-inflammatory treatment or surgical removal of suture and drainage to solve the granuloma.
Suture after nail cancer surgery may produce rejection reaction, and local tissues can not absorb the foreign material, leading to repeated inflammatory stimulation and eventually forming granuloma.
Suture granuloma usually manifests as reddened small nodules, which may be accompanied by pain and itching, mostly appearing near the thread nodes. In most patients, they resolve spontaneously.
If the granuloma is large, red and swollen, it is usually due to inflammation, and can be treated with topical corticosteroids to reduce inflammation and oral antibiotics to reduce inflammation, and regular dressing changes are needed to treat the wound. If conservative treatment is ineffective, sutures can be removed to drain the inflammatory contents.