If your master is even a little negligent, then a visit to a beauty salon can turn into many troubles.
Many salons offer this procedure, and they often use devices such as a cheese grater (or real graters!), Which can be very dangerous, warns Dr. Jacqueline Suthera from New York. “If the penetration depth is great, and the device is used on clients with thin skin, poor circulation or diabetes, it can lead to terrible wounds or infections,” she says. To avoid this, she recommends using special creams designed for the skin of the feet, which can be applied several times a week so that the skin becomes smooth and the calluses gradually disappear.
The main purpose of the cuticle is to protect the nail matrix, the cells that grow nails, explains Dr. Sutera. Cutting the cuticle can lead to infection and damage to the nail matrix, causing the new nails to be thick, discolored, and so unsightly that they can be mistaken for nail fungus. Instead of circumcision, the doctor recommends gently pushing back the cuticle and removing excess skin and burrs with clean instruments.
While this seems like a very enjoyable way to spend time at the spa, experts warn that the bubbling water can harbor bacteria and fungi. Caitlin Hoff, Consumer Safety’s hygiene inspector, recommends finding a salon that uses simple glass vessels that are cleaned after each customer.
4. Treatment of ingrown nails
Some pedicurists deal with ingrown toenails, but orthopedic surgeons advise against trusting them. The ingrown toenail has already punctured the skin, and may have been joined by an abscess or suppuration. It must be handled by a specialist, otherwise bacterial contamination may occur, which will require antibiotic treatment or nail removal.
Although the flu is not directly related to a pedicure, the closed and cramped environment of salons can help spread the infection. If workers do not wear gloves, do not wash their hands after each client, or receive visitors when they are sick, then they themselves will spread the virus. Remember that the virus lives up to eight hours, so you can get infected if an infected client was served in front of you, and the stool was not wiped after it,
A startling fact: An estimated 1,6 million New Yorkers with diabetes suffer from foot ulcers, according to a study by the Medical Association of Podiatrists. Such people should not have a pedicure at all, because in their case there is a particularly high risk of infections, ulcers and amputations of the lower extremities.
7. Shaving legs before pedicure
Often, clients shave their legs before visiting the salon to make a good impression on the pedicurist. This should not be done, as the razor exposes the skin and creates microtraumas that can be infected with insufficiently disinfected instruments, foot baths and even the hands of a master. Better to do a pedicure first, and then shave your legs.
Some salons do not sanitize or even wash their instruments after each client! Therefore, experts advise you to bring your own tools that you are sure of the cleanliness of. In this way, fungal infections, as well as serious diseases such as hepatitis and HIV, can be avoided. If workers claim to sterilize instruments, you can ask to be shown the unopened sterile packaging with a brown dot or stripe that appears during the sterilization process.
According to experts, ordinary soaking of the feet can lead to a change in the water balance in the body and the formation of cracks, which can cause cellulitis or deep subcutaneous infection, especially in patients whose legs are swollen. It is best to avoid prolonged soaking, especially if you have dry skin.
It is a common and sometimes deadly suppurative lesion of the subcutaneous tissue that occurs through a cut or crack in the skin. That is why experts advise you to wait 24 hours after shaving your legs and only then do a pedicure. If a pedicurist accidentally cuts your cuticle or adjacent skin, that wound will become a new gateway for bacteria. If left untreated, the infection can spread and threaten the patient’s life.