After a young woman’s toenails started to separate from her toes, a doctor finally zeroed in on the reason: a fish pedicure, according to a report published Tuesday in the journal JAMA Dermatology.
"Fish are friends, not food," animated sharks famously declare in 2003's "Finding Nemo." But are they pedicurists, too? On TikTok, videos have gone viral of people getting so-called "fish pedicures," ...
Fish pedicures may be trendy, but they could lead to some unexpected complications, a dermatologist reported Tuesday. A woman showed up with split toenails — a condition known medically as ...
A woman began to lose her toenails after a "fish pedicure," a ticklish spa craze popular in China and the United States, according to a study published Tuesday in JAMA Dermatology. The unidentified ...
Fish pedicures are a type of cosmetic treatment in which a person soaks their feet in water while a specific type of toothless fish eats away dead skin. In Turkey, where the practice originates, there ...
With a fish pedicure, Garra rufa eat the dead skin off of feet to reveal smooth skin. But there are some safety and environmental concerns, including difficulty sanitizing between patrons. A fish ...
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