Nail health

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NAIL HEALTH The Long and Short of Nails Nails in good condition can be very attractive. They also reflect an individual’s personal habits both good and bad. Aside from their cosmetic appeal, nails serve many important functions. They help us pick up and manipulate objects and support the tissues of the fingers and toes. Most importantly, nails often reflect our general state of health. Nail’s More than Meets the Eye Nails are produced by living cells in the fingers and toes. They are composed primarily of what is known as keratin, a hardened protein also found in skin and hair. The nail itself consists of several different parts, including: Nail Plate: The visible part of the nail on fingers and toes. Nail Bed: The skin beneath the nail. Matrix: The area under the cuticle, the hidden part of the nail unit where growth takes place. Lunula: This is part of the matrix and is the whitish, half-moon shape at the base of nail, usually most pronounced on the thumb. Cuticle: The tissue that overlaps the nail plate and rims the base of the nail. Nail Folds: The folds of the skin that frame and support the nail on three sides. Nails, like hair, grow from the matrix. As older cells grow out, they are replaced by new ones that are compacted and take a hardened form. The average growth rate for nails is 0.1mm each day, individual growth rates depend on age, time of the year, activity level, and heredity. Fingernails grow faster than toenails. Nails also grow more rapidly in the summer than in the winter. Nails on a person’s dominant hand (right vs. left) grow faster, and nails grow more quickly than women’s, except possibly during pregnancy and old age. Nail growth is affected by disease, hormone imbalance, and the aging process.


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