| Is stretching the hand/fingers of any use? |
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
01/06/12 03:30
moondanc
|
Re: Is stretching the hand/fingers of any use?
callie: I have had Dupuytren's in both hands and the arches of my feet for probably 20 years. I had surgery on one hand 10 years ago. The other hand has remained dormant for about 15 years.
I don't mean to sound harsh, Callie, but aren't you the person who is always recommending open hand surgery? (if you're not, my apologies in advance). Do you think that helped your other hand become dormant? DD is a disease that is different for everyone-- some have it only in one or two fingers, some in both hands, it's very aggressive in some folks, some need treatment every couple years, others have it go dormant...
One size does not fit all and I and many others prefer the least traumatic solution. Good luck to you on it continuing to remain dormant.
Regards, Diane
|
|
|
|
01/06/12 03:42
Emdoller
|
Re: Is stretching the hand/fingers of any use?
Eddie here. Somehow I ended up with two different forum ID's.
I'll continue to stretch against the contraction. The problem with any of this is I'm not sure how one would conclude it helps or hurts as each case is different. If mine stays the same how would I know I wouldn't have if I did nothing? All I know is it starting getting worse so I thought trying this couldn't hurt.
I'll report back in a few months.
Eddie
|
|
|
|
01/06/12 04:57
callie
|
Re: Is stretching the hand/fingers of any use?
Diane,
You said, "aren't you the person who is always recommending open hand surgery"?
No, that is a misinterpretation of my thoughts. To be more accurate, I always suggest that surgery is not the "bad act" that many suggest who have never had surgery. I don't think it should always be the last resort, especially by people who have contractures greater than 70-80 degrees. I have personally talked about all of the procedures to many people. I considered NA before I had my surgery. My surgeon (and this was 10 years ago) talked to me about the possibility of signing up for the Stanford trials for Xiaflex (different name at the time).
You asked, "Do you think that helped your other hand become dormant?" I have no idea, but I really doubt that the surgery had any effect on the other hand.
You said, "One size does not fit all and I and many others prefer the least traumatic solution". That is fine. I find it interesting how surgery (fasciectomy) is built up to be so traumatic. There is generally little or no pain involved. My surgeon considered it to be one of the least traumatic surgeries that he does during the course of his practice. We specifically talked about that. Also, people talk about the recovery period (after a fasciectomy) as though a person's life is put on hold for the duration of the recovery. It is generally not the great sacrifice that some people are led to believe. Can some people have problems with surgery? Of course. Similarly, some people can have problems with NA or Xiaflex.
For me, I prefer the best available solution over the "least traumatic". Best available for me includes least chance for recurrence. For some people that is a fasciectomy. For others it could be NA or Xiaflex.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|