Nail Polish Remover Peeled the Skin Off My Daughter's Fingers

The Dangers of Nail Polish Removers

R. M. Dubuc
Nail polish removers often have a written warning on the label about the dangers of ingestion, the need to keep it away from children, and the fact that it is flammable. There is no written warning that it could cause extreme peeling of the skin on fingers which came in contact with an ordinary, non-acetone nail polish remover. There should be.

The nail polish remover in question was an everyday generic, non-acetone nail polish remover with a Dollar General label. The label compared the generic version to, "the performance of Cutex." The specific formula also promised to, "help soften cuticles and add strength and resiliency for more beautiful nails, " as written on the label. As a parent, I never imagined this nail polish remover would also cause injury and literally peel off the skin on my daughter's fingers. She may well have bathed her hands in paint thinner.

How it Happened
This story is a precautionary tale for any parent with an otherwise mature and capable tween or teen. Many young girls like to paint or decorate their nails, and few, if any, would require parental supervision when using a nail polish remover. My daughter simply applied the non-acetone nail polish remover one evening to remove old, chipped nail polish. In the process, her fingertips came in contact with the nail polish remover.

The next morning she noticed that the skin on her fingertips had begun to form what appeared to be bubbles, with air trapped underneath. One by one, each finger puffed up and reportedly, "felt strange." That evening the first bubble broke open, revealing angry red skin underneath. She initially said they felt like they were tingling and burning, and later plenty of itching began. The outer skin on all her fingers now looked extremely dry and each finger started to peel.

Treatment
By the time she had a nurse examine the damage, her fingers looked raw. The underlayer of skin itched and burned, alternatively. The treatment involved regular applications of Neosporin and bandages during the day. The areas had to be aired out at night to promote healing. Luckily, the skin damaged by the nail polish remover began to heal after about a week. The redness started to fade and the chemically burned skin peeled off.

The Dangers of Nail Polish Remover
The typically strong scent of most nail polish removers should be a warning that nail polish removers are a strong mix of chemicals. The chemicals used in nail polish removers can take paint off just about anything and cause damage to wood finishes, synthetic fabrics, and plastics, as noted on the label. It can also cause the skin to peel off your fingers and cause chemical burns to exposed skin, as learned firsthand with our experience.

Today, all the skin damage has healed. Treatment lasted for about 3 weeks and future use of any nail polish remover will be done wearing gloves.

Published by R. M. Dubuc

R.M. Dubuc is a counselor, writer, and doctoral student who has published over 400 online articles on a variety of topics.  View profile

5 Comments

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  • Kathy5/27/2012

    I am a 48 yrs old women who has been wearing nail polish for several decades now, and until I bought the nail polish remover at a Dollar store did I have problems. A week ago Sunday I remove the old polish off both my fingernails and toenails. Sunday evening I noticed my finger felt numb, never thought much about it until Monday morning when in the shower the hot water was to much for my fingertips.. when I checked my fingers, 5 of them had huge blisters on them....I type all day for a living and when at work one of the finger blister blew open and I literally lost several layers of the skin....within a day I had lost all the skin of the 5 fingers.....went to the hospital as the burning was unbearable....was told the I had 3rd blisters....treated them with a burned cream and kept them bandage during the day and had to let the air at them at night....it is a week later and the finger have dried out but the peeling of dry skin continues....I used the non acetone type...beware.....

  • Christine2/10/2012

    I meant that the ACETONE works 100x better!! Not the non-acetone...

  • Christine2/10/2012

    The same thing happens with my fingers but only on the ones where I'm holding the cotton ball. I'm 31 and have noticed this only happens with the Non-Acetone Nail Polish Remover. I began using the regular Acetone polish remover and it did not give me the same effects. At this moment right now my pointer finger is peeling because I ran out of Acetone remover and used an old bottle of Non-Acetone. I also realized that the non-acetone works 100x better. You should be using Acetone for natural nails anyway.

  • Sherry Walker7/1/2011

    One person can tolerate what another person can't. Your daughter has sensitive skin. Can she tolerate a more expensive nail remover? I don't get acrylic nails anymore because of all of the chemicals and then when you have to soak them off in nail remover, that is extremely toxic. Glad she okay now.

  • Hannah E. Trotter5/3/2011

    It sounds like your daughter has sensitive skin. Try using an all natural nail polish remover, like this Organic Soy Nail Polish remover that smells like lavender: http://www.amazon.com/Organic-Polish-Remover-Karma-Organics/dp/B00363H8IU/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1304451000&sr=8-1-fkmr1
    It would be very hard to remove nail polish while wearing gloves :)

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