When in the house don't wear shoes, The additional air getting to the soles of your feet and reduced temperature of the foot will start to work on the problem. it might take a while but should help and enable you to start touching the soles too.
You might when able want to do a little emery board work on the hard skin area too.
When in the house don't wear shoes, The additional air getting to the soles of your feet and reduced temperature of the foot will start to work on the problem. it might take a while but should help and enable you to start touching the soles too.
Cheers.
I do wear slippers and trainers indoors quite a bit, which is silly really.
Sounds like a corn. They're really painful if you put pressure on it, and they go in quite deep, you really need to get it done by a chiropodist. When it's cut out professionally it doesn't hurt.
Sounds like a corn. They're really painful if you put pressure on it, and they go in quite deep, you really need to get it done by a chiropodist. When it's cut out professionally it doesn't hurt.
But wont it really hurt if a chiropodist does it? I mean it must do a bit, surely
It sounds like a callus or corn - try putting some bazuka (salicylic acid?) on it - the stuff that's used for veruccas, then file it down, and use a corn plaster. A chiropodist will probably do the same thing - they won't cut it out (i.e., draw blood) or do anything painful.
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Corn or veruccha (sp?).
There are acid based liquids you can use that'll burn it away in about ten days.
it hurts just to touch it, let alone cutting it
You might when able want to do a little emery board work on the hard skin area too.
Cheers.
I do wear slippers and trainers indoors quite a bit, which is silly really.
Sounds like a corn. They're really painful if you put pressure on it, and they go in quite deep, you really need to get it done by a chiropodist. When it's cut out professionally it doesn't hurt.
But wont it really hurt if a chiropodist does it? I mean it must do a bit, surely