Corns & Calluses
Chapter 12. Skin Conditions

All too often, corns and calluses are the price we pay for neglecting our feet. Corns and calluses are very much alike; they just differ in where they occur.

Corns show up on the bony area on top of the toes and the skin between the toes. Corns feel hard to the touch, are tender, and have a roundish appearance. A small, clear spot called a hen's eye may form in the center.

Calluses can occur on any part of the body that goes through repeated pressure or irritation. Common places are on the balls or heels of the feet, on the hands, and on the knees. Calluses are flat, painless thickenings of the skin.

Corns and calluses form as a protective response. They are extra cells made in a skin area that gets repeated rubbing or squeezing from such things as:
Footwear that fits poorly
Activities that put pressure on the hands, knees, and feet

If Self-Care Tips do not get rid of corns and calluses, a family doctor or foot doctor (podiatrist) may need to be consulted. He or she can scrape away the hardened tissue and peel away the corn with stronger solutions. (Sometimes warts lie underneath corns and need to be treated too.)

Questions to Ask

Do you have any signs of infection (fever, swelling, redness, pus sacs, puffiness)?
Do you have circulation problems or diabetes mellitus?
Do you have one or both of these problems even after providing self-care?
Continued or worse pain
No improvement after 2 to 3 weeks

Self-Care Tips

For Corns:
Never pick at corns or use toenail scissors or clippers, a razor blade, or any other sharp tool to cut off corns. You may injure your skin or trigger an infection. Instead:
Get rid of shoes that fit poorly, especially if they squeeze your toes together.
Soak your feet in warm water to soften the corn.
Cover the corn with a protective, nonmedicated pad, usually available in drugstores. (A piece of foam rubber or moleskin will do in a pinch.)
If the outer layers of a corn have peeled away, apply a nonprescription liquid of 5-10 percent salicylic acid. Gently rub the corn off with cotton gauze.
Take your shoe to a shoe repair person and ask that he/she sew a metatarsal bar onto your shoe to use when a corn is healing.

For Calluses:
Never try to get rid of a callus by cutting it with a sharp tool. Instead:
Soak your feet in warm water to soften the callus, and pat dry.
Rub the callus gently with a pumice stone.
Cover calluses with protective pads, available in drugstores.
Check for poorly fitting shoes or other sources of pressure that may lead to calluses.
Wear gloves if doing a hobby or work that puts pressure on your hands.
Wear knee pads for activities that put pressure on your knees.

HEALTH AT HOME - Your Complete Guide to Symptoms, Solutions, and Self-Care © 1999 by Don R. Powell. American Institute for Preventive Medicine. 

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Date updated 02/01/99