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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / How to Remove a Splinter without a Needle (+ Video)

How to Remove a Splinter without a Needle (+ Video)

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • The Problem with Removing Splinters with Needles+−
    • Going to a Doctor Instead is Expensive
  • How to Remove a Splinter at Home with No Needles
  • Epsom Salts – How to Draw Out a Splinter+−
    • How Long Does it Take?
  • Keep Magnesium Sulfate on Hand

How to quickly draw out even deep splinters without a needle, pain, or trip to the doctor even if they have been embedded for some time. One minute video demonstration included.

how to remove a splinter

A splinter is a fragment of any foreign object that penetrates and becomes lodged inside one’s body. While splinters can come from a variety of materials such as glass, plastic, metal or even the spines of animals, for most people, splinters commonly occur on the fingers and hands from handling some type of plant matter such as a piece of wood.

When one experiences a splinter, pain as the sharp object initially penetrates the skin is usually felt. This is because the object has cut through the cutaneous layer of skin, settling into the subcutaneous layer below. While some splinters stay put at that point, most others will continue to move around, damaging additional tissue in the process.

Splinters that become lodged in the fingers or hand as would happen while doing yard work are usually very easy to remove with a simple needle that has been properly cleaned with alcohol first.

The Problem with Removing Splinters with Needles

The problem with this approach is that children don’t like it as picking at a splinter with a pointy object can sometimes hurt until part of the splinter is exposed and the rest pulled out with a pair of tweezers or a piece of tape.

The second problem with the needle approach is that it doesn’t always work if the splinter is very deep or quite thin and hard to see.

This happened to my husband recently when he got a thorn that was about an inch long deeply lodged in his left index finger while doing some yard work.

No matter how hard he tried to dig that thorn out with the traditional needle approach, he could not even find it let alone remove it.

It was just too deep.

At first, he figured the splinter would naturally work its way out.  Splinters sometimes do this – the skin “pushes” them to the surface of the skin where they are easily removed a short time later with tweezers or your fingers.

That didn’t happen with this splinter. Waiting a few days made the situation much worse as the finger got very sore and began to swell.

Going to a Doctor Instead is Expensive

I became very concerned at that point because the finger was obviously infected. I suggested a trip to the doctor, but my husband wasn’t keen on that idea as the (out of network) holistic family doctor we called said it would cost $500 for the office required consultation and subsequent removal of the splinter.

$500 to remove a splinter? Unbelievable!

My husband then had the bright idea to ask his friend who is a veterinarian about the situation.

How to Remove a Splinter at Home with No Needles

The veterinarian said that removing even a deep splinter is easy with magnesium sulfate, better known as Epsom salts. Many people are familiar with an Epsom salt bath for sore muscles or to improve sleep.

This remedy uses Epsom salt in another hugely beneficial way – to draw toxins even a splinter right out of the skin. (1)

The veterinarian said you could either soak the finger a few times a day in a cup of warm water and Epsom salts or make a poultice with it. The poultice is much faster and more effective, however.

Such a method is supported in the scientific literature and very safe as well. (2)

Epsom Salts – How to Draw Out a Splinter

My husband decided to go with the poultice route. He took a small pinch of Epsom salts, placed it on the bandage section of a regular, large band-aid and wrapped the finger with it. He changed the bandage once a day or after it got wet in the shower.

Another option is to put a bit of magnesium sulfate paste (which costs just a few dollars) on the area and cover with a bandage. Magnesium sulfate is the same thing as Epsom salt.

This one minute video demonstrates the easy process. Be sure to clean the area well and use established first aid methods before and after the splinter is out of the skin. (3)

How Long Does it Take?

Within 2 days, it was apparent that the Epsom salts poultice had worked!  The end of that thorn was ever so slightly sticking through the skin!

My husband pulled about 1/3″ of thorn out, but he could tell there was still more in there.

He continued to apply the Epsom salts poultice for one more day which caused the rest of the thorn to come to the surface of the skin as well.  He used tweezers to pull the rest of the thorn out, which turned out to be about another 1/2″ in length.

Best of all, the swelling and soreness of the finger quickly resolved with the removal of the thorn.  It has been a couple of months since this happened and the finger is perfectly fine.

Keep Magnesium Sulfate on Hand

I will be using the Epsom salts or magnesium sulfate paste on a bandage approach to remove all splinters that occur in our household from now on. I’ve purchased a small bottle of the magnesium sulfate paste, and it is now a permanent part of my medicine cabinet.

This approach suggested by our veterinary friend is far easier than using needles or enduring the drama of a doctor’s visit and there is surprisingly no pain at all involved.

One word of caution. If you choose to use the crystals instead of the paste, be sure to buy Epsom salts that are human-grade, rather than agricultural grade.

References

(1) Magnesium Sulfate Paste
(2) Use of Epsom Salts, historically considered
(3) Foreign object in the skin: First aid

woman with a splinter in her left hand

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Category: Natural Remedies, Skin Health
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (336)

  1. Linda

    Dec 1, 2017 at 3:11 pm

    Any ideas for a sliver buried deep under my nail. I cannot get to it. It is from a wood railing.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Dec 3, 2017 at 7:31 am

      No ideas on that one if you can’t get the paste access to where the sliver is. You may need to go to the doctor to have it removed … but the nail might be removed too 🙁

  2. Hannah

    Oct 23, 2017 at 8:55 pm

    I have a tiny black splinter and have no idea how it happened its on my foot and I have to walk weird and it hurts really bad ive tried stuff but it doesn’t work and only a little piece is out I used needles a pin and tweezers and none worked!!! I also tried a foot batj with epson salt still did not work?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 24, 2017 at 12:41 pm

      A foot bath with epsom salts is not going to work. You need to put epsom salt paste or a few epsom salt grains on top of skin where the splinter is and secure with a bandage as discussed in the post above.

  3. Sophie

    Sep 23, 2017 at 12:41 am

    I had a splinter in my foot and when I walked, it hurt really bad so for 3 days i have been walking weirdly. I tried baking soda, tape, and glue. (I found those strategies from other websites) None of them worked because my splinter had gone straight in. Then i found this website. I tried the epsom salt for a day and it came right out! I’m so glad I found this website! Thank you!

    Reply
  4. Elle

    Sep 2, 2017 at 3:46 pm

    Homeopathic silica (silicea) will also help the body work out foreign objects. It’s so powerful that people with metal implants should not take it!

    Reply
  5. Tanya

    Aug 17, 2017 at 5:51 am

    i had a splinter under my thumb nail, I thought I pulled it out when it happened, but now three days later, it hurts so much. throwing pain and little swelling. do you think it’s going work under the nail. I’m scared to think how would doctor take it out from that spot?

    Reply
  6. Steph

    Aug 16, 2017 at 5:18 am

    I had a wood splinter embedded deep just below my little finger and I ended up going to the doc. He dug at it and dug at it and finally gave up. He said I’d just have to let it fester and then come back and he’d be able to get it out. It took about a week to fester and then I was able to get it out myself then. The splinter had gone straight in and was about a half inch. I’d much prefer to use the method with the epsom salts. But right now I don’t have any and have a few stubborn splinters now. I found another recommendation to use Ichthammol (black drawing salve). I’m trying that now. If it works I’ll update my comment.

    Reply
  7. Jukie

    Jul 27, 2017 at 3:40 pm

    I did exactly the same and walked into a thorn, I’m amazed at how this paste works! It draws it close enough to the surface for you to pull the object out. And I run, so I was potentially pounding it straight back in my foot, but overnight with the paste, it surfaced again. Best £2.99 spent!

    Reply
  8. Jennifer Banaszak

    Jul 23, 2017 at 12:25 am

    Can’t wait to try this.
    I have had a splinter on the bottom of my foot for 2 months and no amount of digging will
    Get it out! Buying some tomorrow and will
    Soak a few times a
    Day

    Reply
  9. M.An

    Jul 11, 2017 at 6:22 pm

    I’m so happy I found this article. I got a bamboo splinter last week and over the last 8 days the epsom salt has worked it out. I pulled the final 3/8th inch piece out today! Boy did this save me!

    Reply
  10. Noella

    Jul 3, 2017 at 6:04 pm

    Thank you for your post. A few days ago I found myself with a splinter of wood in the bend of one of my fingers- thenreaultmof feeding themfire without gloves! Ouch! I removed the piece protruding but there wasmsome left deeply embedded. So, I took to google. A disinfected needle just irritated! After that I tried vinegar, bicarb of soda, castor oil for 24 hours and others but the remedy that succeeded without pain was – epsom salts on a band aid. It took a little longer than ecpected but this morning I successfully pulled out a splinter ( approx 1 cm) which had risen to the surface. Definitely will use and recommend that remedy again.

    Reply
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