Well, if its broken, you should go to the hospital.
go see a doctor
When the bone in the toe was broken, there were also blood vessels that were ripped, torn or cut. The bruising is a result of the broken blood vessels; the color is from red blood cells that are sitting in the extravascular space. Over the course of a couple weeks the bruising should go away.
It can be small waterpops so you should just leave them there until they go away.
Go get it x-rayed and find out.
Place a pad between the broken toe, and the next one to separate them, but not too much. Then use medical tape to tape the two toes together to stabilize the break. Do not change the dressing, unless it really needs it. Do not get it wet. Keep it on for 3 to 4 weeks. Then check to see how it is. Do not keep the dressing on for weeks and weeks, but if you feel that it needs a bit longer, redress for another week. If you have a broken 'big' toe go to the hospital, but for the others the treatment is as above. For big toes, the doctor will often tell you to wear an orthopedic flat shoe, and though it looks dorky, it will help your big toe heal properly. You won't realize how much you use it until you can't.
it will go bent and extreamly red and brused and it will be extreaamly painful you would not be able to walk
Its hard to be 100% sure by just looking at it sometimes. If you had an injury or direct trauma to the area and there is swelling, pain, difficulty weight bearing, these MIGHT indicate a fracture. You don't always see a deformity. If your toe is twisted or out of normal alignment, don't delay care. Get an X-ray and doctor's care to prevent a permanent deformity. However, doctors do nothing special for an ordinary fracture of a toe. They simply tape it to the next toe. The tape should NEVER be tight. Swelling should NEVER appear at the end of the toes -- if so, the tape is too tight and should be removed promptly. After icing the area, and all swelling going down, it can be re-taped. Rest, ice and elevation are the 3 measures used for toes. Rest means stay off it as much as possible. Elevation means put it on a pillow when sitting and laying. Ice means 10-15 minutes of an ice pack, then remove; reapply every 4-6 hours for 15 minutes. Always put a towel or cloth between the ice and the skin. Ice can freeze skin, so check the skin every 5 minutes when ice is on, and move the ice to a new position. A broken toe usually starts to feel better within 1 week if you do rest, ice, and elevation. It can take 2 weeks for swelling and bruising to go away. Pain can persist in the toe's joint for months, or off and on for years. Prevention: Wear closed-toe shoes even in the house, no flip-flops and no bare feet.
Your reaction to a camel toe should be to freakout if you need to and then go see a doctor about that because im pritty sure thats abnormal.
The new toenail will grow in and the old one will fall off or be pushed along if it is still attached. Go to a doctor if it pushes into the skin or otherwise irritates the toe.
No, you should go and see a qualified medical practitioner (a Doctor) about your toe, you are past using home remedies.
I broken my big toe and it so much pain and very painfully to walk i can not brealy walk on it paprs and hurts so much i went to doctor and all side it creck and broken so strpe up and all do and still so much pain and hurt to walk and not it go to hopstial over be take painkill but still in load of pain and my toe so un confected all time and the pain kept a woke a night i bardly not sleep becuase who much pain i am please hlep