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NA
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08/06/2005 23:44
Jim

not registered

08/06/2005 23:44
Jim

not registered

Always try least invasive method and get a good doc

I am repeating good advice from several of you. "Try the least invasive methods first." And try to treat it at the early signs, before contracture starts.

I've had it for maybe 12 or 15 years - both hands mutiple times, suspiciously following trauma. My Mom, two brothers, three sisters, a cousin, two nephews all have it.

Triamcinolone injections as needed, (3 sets, 6 weeks apart) have been a cheap and easy fix for years at a time. There is some skill knowing where the injections precisely go and how to observe results, so go to a doc that is skilled and succesful in this method. My first injection was by a plastic sugeon who really just wanted to wait and cut!

My younger brother is on his third fasciectomy and this leaves his hands full of scars after months of recovery, AND IT COMES BACK!!! My older brother just had injections in a midly effected hand and a skin graft on the badly contracted other hand. I look forward to seeing the result on the skin graft.


The trouble with fasciectomy and NA is that they do not remove the "factory" of DC, the skin and its associated Type III collagen.

06/15/2006 23:45
Bill Paters

not registered

06/15/2006 23:45
Bill Paters

not registered

alternate treatment

I have popped two DD contractions by carrying buckets of rocks to build my patio. The rocks in the buckets are very heavy. It was not my intention to release the contractions that way. It hurt a little but not for long. I was black and blue for a while but my fingers are straight.

06/16/2006 23:04
Wolfgang

not registered

06/16/2006 23:04
Wolfgang

not registered

Dupuytren?

Bill, maybe you had self-NA without weakening the cords with needles, just breaking them ... Sometimes hard work has unexpected benefits ...

Wolfgang

11/13/2006 23:25
Doug Shokes

not registered

11/13/2006 23:25
Doug Shokes

not registered

Still there but significantly reduced

I first noticed the signs of DC about 8 years ago. It progressively got worse, and even painful. I wasn't surprised to learn that it tends to affect those of Northern European descent who are diabetic or smoke and drink. I have all of those backgrounds/maladies. I'm writing because I was just feeling my left palm beneath my ring finger, where the irritating contracture had been. While it hasn't disappeared entirely, the lump and cord are about one-fifth the original size, it's almost unnoticeable to me and completely unnoticeable to anyone else. I've never had surgery, and I only take vitamins or other supplements sporadically. The only thing I can attribute it to is that I started exercising a while back--both aerobics and weightlifting. I don't know which is responsible--if either, or both. I have become aware that while I lift weights, nothing particularly heavy (I'm 52 years old and diabetic), my hands are stretched in every direction. The aerobics might help also because of the increased blood flow. (You have to figure that anything affecting diabetics and smokers in particular has something to do with circulation.) On the other hand, maybe it's neither and just some peculiarity dealing with me exclusively. However, I tend to think the combination of lifting weights and exercise is probably responsible. Hope this helps.

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