Nail fungus is far more than a cosmetic problem. For many people it becomes a daily burden — closed shoes in summer, avoiding the pool, the quiet embarrassment that never quite goes away.
The market is full of products promising relief. Creams, oils, lacquers, tablets — yet millions of people try one after another with little to show for it. The reason is simpler than you’d think.
The fungus doesn’t sit on the surface of your nail. It lives underneath, hidden behind dense layers of keratin — the tough protein that makes your nail hard. Creams can’t reach it. Lacquers evaporate before they get through. Even oral medication takes an indirect route through the bloodstream, with liver risks and a success rate of just 30–40%.
In short: most treatments are fighting in a place the fungus doesn’t even live.
But recently, something caught my attention. A completely different approach — one that doesn’t try to go around the nail or through the body, but directly through it.