Keep a healthy life

The corns and calluses on the feet are common problems, and people with this problem are looking for simple solutions. It’s not that easy. Corns and calluses will appear on the feet and toes, which is a reaction to excessive pressure on a certain part. Corn is a response to smaller but deeper, more localized pressures. The wound healing tissue is wide but not deep, which is a response to the high pressure of a larger area. This is a natural process because the skin thickens, protects itself and responds to the higher pressure in the area. There are many reasons for the pressure increase. For example, hammer toes, thumbs, arches, or shoes do not fit. Because too many feet can be a problem, we walk with shoes. So all these are the reasons for the great pressure.

The only correct way to treat corn and wound tissue is to remove the thickened epidermis and then eliminate the cause. Removing thick skin in any way is not the real answer. Because it will recover. It may take weeks, months or even a year or so, but it will come back eventually. It is important to determine where the excessive stress of corn comes from, and to deal with corn no longer coming back. This can be very simple. For example, you can wear more suitable shoes to reduce stress, or it can be as complex as surgery on the big toe to remove the bone with excessive pressure.

One of the treatments that should not be used is the use of medicated corn air cushions. They claim to cure corn, but they don’t do well. The idea behind them is that they contain acid that can attack corn. If you spread medicine on the corn, it will remove the corn. But the mountain doesn’t know what corn is, not corn, so it only eats everything you wear. They will eat normal skin around and below corn. If there is a potential disease, such as diabetes, it has a great impact on the way to cure with acid, so it may be very dangerous. If fortunately, the corn pad can really eat enough corn to give you some relief, then the medical corn pad cannot eliminate the cause of corn. It will continue to do so until it comes back to deal with the pressure that caused corn for the first time. Help yourself, see a podiatrist, and accept advice on how to deal with this problem.