Here's What Causes Hangnails and How to Prevent Them

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Keep hands and nails moisturized to prevent hangnails. Image Credit: Dariia Chernenko/iStock/GettyImages

Hangnails are up there with the agony of hitting your funny bone and stubbing your toe. Except maybe they're worse because the discomfort can last for days.

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A hangnail is when a piece of skin at the edge of your nail tears, according to the American Academy of Dermatology Association. They happen to the best of us, and this is probably not your first battle with them. So let's chat about what causes them, and maybe more importantly, how to treat and prevent hangnails.

What Causes Hangnails?

Hangnails are pretty common, especially in cold weather, Debra Jaliman, MD, a New York City-based dermatologist and author of ​Skin Rules​, tells LIVESTRONG.com. "Your skin is prone to dryness in the cold, winter months. Dry, cracked skin can lead to hangnails," she says.

If you bite your nails, you're also more prone to developing hangnails.

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What's more, because they create an irregular surface next to the nail, hangnails can get snagged on sweaters or caught on other material, pulled further and then bleed.

How to Get Rid of Hangnails

Let's start with what you should absolutely not do, Dr. Jaliman says: Pinch the hangnail with your pointer finger and thumb and try to rip it off. Or worse, bite it off with your teeth. You're probably likely to tear it more, which again, can cause bleeding.

Hangnails can become infected if they tear off, which allows bacteria and fungus a route into the skin. (This skin infection is called paronychia, per the U.S. National Library of Medicine.) So, it's worth it to take a few steps at home to treat a hangnail properly.

Dr. Jaliman recommends the following steps:

  1. Soak​ your hangnail in warm water to soften thenail.
  2. Clip​ off the hangnail with a cleancuticle scissor or nail clipper.
  3. Apply​ Aquaphor Healing Ointment orVaseline onto the nail three times per day.
  4. Bandage​ the finger if it's painful. Bonus benefit: You can't pick at it if it's covered.
  5. Treat​ the nail with a thin layer of a bacitracin ointment (like Neosporin) — anover-the-counter antibiotic ointment that stops the growth of bacteria to help preventinfection — if the skin around the nail appears red and/or irritated.

If that's not enough, and — despite the prevention steps below — you get frequent or severe hangnails, then you can ask your dermatologist if they treat patients by applying surgical glue, suggests a November 2019 paper in the ​Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology​. This adheres the skin so it won't tear deeper, and, say the authors, patients can go about daily tasks without worrying about pain or discomfort. Once healed, the hangnail will fall off. (But see your doc first before attempting this at home yourself.)

How to Prevent Hangnails

Of course, avoiding a hangnail in the first place is the ideal. Here's what to do, according to Dr. Jaliman:

  • Keep hands ​and​ nails moisturized.​ "Don't just apply lotion or cream to your hands, also applyit to your nail beds and cuticles," she says.
  • Cover up.​ If you're washing dishes orcleaning with chemicals, make sure to wear gloves.
  • Keep hands dry.​ If you can help it, don't let your hands sit in water for anextended time.

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