Polyonychia

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Polyonychia
Other namessupernumerary nails of the fingers and toes
Bulakenyo adolescent barefoot boy Jeepney passenger Syndactyly Webbed toes 03.jpg
Polyonychia from congenital polysyndactyly
Specialty Medical genetics
Symptoms Having two or more finger/toenails on a single digit
Complications Social insecurity
Usual onsetBirth (congenital), post-traumatic (acquired)
DurationLife-long (unless it's corrected)
TreatmentPlastic surgery
Prognosis Good
Frequencypolydactyly: 1 in 500-1,000 live births[ citation needed ] syndactyly: 1 in 2,500-3,000 births [1]
DeathsNone

Polyonychia also known as supernumerary nails is a condition in which two or more nails grow in the same finger or toe. [2]

Contents

Signs and symptoms

The signs/symptoms of polyonychia are very easy to detect: two or more nails growing on the same finger or toe.

The nails can either be separate, small nails (micronychia) or one wide, almost complete nail, the digit affected could also be wider than normal

Causes

Polyonychia is generally caused by a congenital duplication of the distal phalange of the affected digit(s), this can be caused by congenital factors (sporadic without a genetic link) or by genetic factors (sporadic or familial with genetic link).

It can also be caused by polysyndactyly, which is characterized as one normal digit being connected/webbed (syndactyly) to an extra digit (polydactyly).

Polyonychia can also be acquired, such as after an accident that affected the nail bed causing it to split. This type of polyonychia is just referred to as "post-traumatic split nail" [3]

Polyonychia's syndromic causes include:

Polyonychia's non-syndromic causes include:

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polysyndactyly</span> Medical condition

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References

  1. "Syndactyly: Practice Essentials, Etiology, Epidemiology". 17 February 2022.
  2. "Definition of polyonychia | Dictionary.com". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2022-04-10.
  3. Lade, Nitin Ramchandra; Jain, Divya Bimit; Singh, Adarsh Lata (2012-06-01). "Post-traumatic acquired polyonychia: A rare occurrence". Dermatology Online Journal. 18 (6): 10. doi:10.5070/D30755b6jk. PMID   22747934.
  4. RESERVED, INSERM US14-- ALL RIGHTS. "Orphanet: Isolated congenital onychodysplasia". www.orpha.net. Retrieved 2022-04-10.
  5. Knipe, Henry. "Duplicated distal phalanx of great toe | Radiology Case | Radiopaedia.org". Radiopaedia. Retrieved 2022-04-10.