When toenails fall off

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When toenails fall off

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What happens when your child's toenail falls of and should you be worried? First and foremost, make sure the child is okay. Check them, take care of the pain, wash off the toe with soap and water, make sure everything is clean. You want to check the nail bed. That's the base underneath the nail plate or what you call the toenail. As long as there are no cuts or damage to it, for the most part, a new nail will grow out. Nails will grow continuously, it is just going to take a little bit longer for the nail to come in. You want to protect it. Make sure it doesn't get injured, it doesn't get hurt. Keep it clean and a new nail will grow out. If there's any damage to the nail bed, then you want to get it taken care of. If you don't, there's a potential for the nail to grow in deformed and it will cause pain when you wear shoes. Just make sure there is no damage to the nail bed. Nails will grow back.

See Noah Blumofe, DPM's video on When toenails fall off...

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Noah Blumofe, DPM

Podiatrist

Dr. Blumofe was born and raised in Skokie, Illinois. Later he attended the University of Illinois at Chicago and completed his undergraduate studies in 1996, receiving a Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences. He then attended Scholl College of Podiatric Medicine at Rosalind Franklin University in Chicago, where he received a second Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Sciences in 1998, and his Doctorate of Podiatric Medicine in 2001. Dr. Blumofe's residency was completed at the St. John Detroit Riverview Medical Center in Michigan, which is affiliated with the Kirkside Osteopathic Medical School. The following year he continued his post-graduate training with a two-year surgical fellowship in Long Beach, Calif. His main responsibilities included patient care, diabetic foot and wound care and surgical procedures of the foot and ankle, as well as teaching podiatric residents.

Dr. Blumofe's specialties include diabetic wound care, podiatric medicine, neuropathy, limb salvage, cosmetic foot surgery and sports medicine. He attributes his passion for helping diabetics regain and maintain a more normal life to the experience he had in seeing his mother and his grandfather deal with the realities of the condition. Often, Dr. Blumofe is known to say to his patients that "diabetes is NOT a disease, it is a lifestyle change".

When Dr Blumofe is not working (all four hours of the day that remain), he spends time helping his wife, Sandy, raise their three children Abby, Joey, and Rachel. Dr Blumofe holds a 1st degree Black Belt (ShoDan) in the Jinenkan Martial Arts (though has since retired!)

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