Fingernails: 5 Signs That Point to Bigger Health Problems

 


By Marlo Sollitto, AgingCare.com contributing editor

Changes in the fingernails can indicate everything from heart disease to thyroid problems and malnutrition. Here are some nail conditions that might require medical attention.

1. Nail Separates from Nail Bed

What it looks like: Fingernails become loose and can separate from the nail bed.

Possible causes:

    Injury or infection
    Thyroid disease
    Drug reactions (Top 6 Medication Problems)
    Psoriasis
    Reactions to nail hardeners

2. Yellow Nails

What it looks like: Yellow discoloration in the fingernails. Nails thicken and new growth slows. Nails may lack a cuticle and may detach from the nail bed.

Possible causes:

    Respiratory conditions, such as chronic bronchitis
    Swelling of the hands (lymphedema)

 3. Spoon Nails

What it looks like: Soft nails that look scooped out. In spoon nails (koilonychia), the depression usually is large enough to hold a drop of liquid.

Possible causes:

    Iron deficiency
    Anemia

4. Nail Clubbing

What it looks like: The tips of the fingers become enlarged and the nails curve around the fingertips.

Possible causes:

    Low oxygen levels in the blood, which could point to heart disease
    Inflammatory bowel disease
    Cardiovascular disease
    Liver disease

5. Opaque Nails

What it looks like: Nails look mostly opaque but have a dark band at the tips (a condition known as Terry’s Nails)

Possible causes:

    Malnutrition
    Congestive heart failure
    Diabetes
    Liver disease

If your senior parent has one of these nail problems, and it doesn’t go away, make an appointment with your doctor to get it diagnosed.

 
 
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