Making a medical appointment can be a hassle. Finding a reliable practitioner, and one that isn’t always booked up, can be a huge challenge (especially in Toronto), not to mention all the trouble that comes with taking time off work in the middle of the day. On top of that, we have trade in the cozy, work-from-home track suit and put on – gasp – a pair of jeans. Rough. So, it’s understandable why it’s sometimes tempting to try and treat infections at home with social media suggestions, or just leave it. However, while the internet might tell you otherwise, this is not a good solution for fungal foot infections.
Having foot fungus may seem like it can wait, but the truth is it can’t. If you leave it and wait, you are actually feeding the fungus with your skin or your nail. So it is not going to go away – it will actually thrive, grow and increase. After a while people will try and treat foot fungus at home.
Toenail fungus home remedies have gotten a lot of press recently. Some of them good…some bad and some just down right dangerous.
Did you know there are people washing their feet in perfect bleach to get rid of foot fungus? This is not good.
You might have also heard of Listerine. Listerine is good at what it does – helping fight all manner of mouth problems. However, it was never designed for the feet. Yet people still use it for fungal toenail or skin infections.
The problem with the majority of home treatment remedies is that:
- They have minimal amount of the active component that actually attacks the fungus
- Fungus is not on top or necessarily under the nail – it is within it. So any treatment has to penetrate the nail or treat the nail from where it grows from and soaking the nail does not allow this.
What is a Fungal Foot Infection?
What is a fungal foot infection? Well, it’s an infection on the foot caused by a fungus. It can be classed in 2 ways.
- It can be a skin infection. One common example is athlete’s foot, which often manifests as a scaley, red rash or translucent, moist skin between toes. Other symptoms can include itching, stinging, burning, and skin that’s dry, cracked, or peeling.
- Another common fungal foot infection is fungal toenails. With fungal toenails, you might notice nail discoloration (yellow, brown, or white), nail thickening, and a fragile or brittle nail. Both infections can cause foot odor (not ideal).
Can You Ignore a Fungal Infection?
Now in the grand scheme of things, you might notice these symptoms and not think much of them. Sometimes these infections aren’t even that painful, it might be easy to write this off as not a big deal. However, while lots of people think foot fungus is just a cosmetic problem, there can be significant health consequences to not getting proper treatment.
Fungal infections can:
- Spread from the skin to the nail or vice versa
- Increase and worsen. The nail can become thicker and apply more pressure to the nail bed causing pain. Fungal skin infections can start to crack and in some cases create a bacterial infection
- Travel to other parts of your body including your scalp, skin folds or finger nails
For people with diabetes, the thickened nail can cause skin and cellular breakdowns under the nail. A thick nail also has the potential to scratch the adjacent toe. If the skin breaks then that small cut can become bacterial infected. This can then lead to life-threatening complications.
Do At-Home Remedies Work?
Okay, so leaving these infections untreated is a bad idea. But can we avoid the dreaded journey out of the house? The short answer is no – foot fungus can rarely be eradicated and fully treated at home.
The 6 top home “remedy” myths to treat foot fugus
- Vicks VapoRub. This foot fungus treatment myth is based on a study done a while ago with just 18 patients. That’s all the patients they had. It took 48 weeks for any change to occur. We don’t really know what the change was or even if they had fungus initially. So, needless to say, this is not a reliable solution for foot fungus and there’s limited to no scientific evidence to support it.
- Mouthwash. You can’t soak your feet long enough for the liquid to penetrate the nail if you have toenail fungus. That said, it might have a very minor affect upon Athletes Foot – but the expense, the potential complications, side effects and risks associated with adding more moisture to the area are just not worth it
- Oregano oil. Oregano was used by Hippocrates as an antiseptic. Oregano has been shown to be an effective anti-microbial agent. However, while it can possibly be good against bacterial problems, that doesn’t mean it will work against fungus. Fungus and bacteria are different organisms, so what works for one may not work for the other.
- Apple Cider Vinegar. This classic “remedy” to treat foot fungus at home is talked about a lot on the internet. Yet, there is no evidence that it has antifungal nail properties.
- Hydrogen Peroxide. The bubbling nature cures! Actually it doesn’t; it reduces the good healing chemicals produced by our body, and the bubbling doesn’t mean it’s working; it is just a chemical reaction. There is no evidence that hydrogen peroxide has any antifungal properties. More likely, people were applying so much Hydrogen Peroxide that the nail came off.
- Tea Tree Oil. It seems to be in everything and possibly it might have some antifungal properties. However, tea tree oil gets so diluted that the core anti-fungal properties are drastically reduced. Tea tree oil might be able to help very very mild toenail fungus in its early stages, but its ability to work is reduced because it can not penetrate the nail effectively enough.
Regardless of treatment, toenail fungus can come back.
What About Over-The-Counter Medications?
To treat toenail fungus at home many people will go to the Pharmacist or dug store. Most over-the-counter medications only help with the symptoms of minor, early-stage fungal infections. When the fungus is around the toenail, sometimes these anti-fungals can’t even reach the area that most needs treatment. Foot fungus likes to hide behind and within the toenails and grows in the moisture-rich environment in our shoes and socks. While some home remedies or over-the-counter medication might relieve symptoms for a short period of time, it’s more than likely that they’ll just come back, sometimes worse than before.
How Can I Treat Foot Fungus?
If you think you have a fungal infection, treatment by a foot health professional is your best bet. They will:
- Assess your feet and figure out if it is a foot fungus in the first place.
- Find the effective treatment for you and the severity of the foot fungus
- Discuss ways to try and prevent the foot fungus from coming back
If you book a visit here at Feet First Clinic, our chiropodists have all the tools to properly manage that fungal foot infection – and even help you keep your feet infection-free in the future. (Plus, we promise not to use any oregano oil).