What Is Early Stage Dupuytren’s Contracture and Its Symptoms

In most of the cases, Dupuytren’s first occurs after 40. The first symptom at this phase is the lump in the palm of the hand.

 Early Stage of Dupuytren’s Contracture

A lot of people mistake it for a callus in the early stage of Dupuytren’s Contracture. They think they’ve done something while playing badminton. Or they just believe they have a callus and don’t think anything of it because it doesn’t bother them in the beginning.

Symptoms during early stages

Along with the lump, some patients experience temporary tenderness, burning, or itching in the area. Patients with early-stage Dupuytren’s Contracture describe the tenderness as similar to a bruise resolving or a cut in the last stages of healing. It is also mistaken for tendonitis, but it affects a layer of tissue directly under the skin, and muscles are not directly involved.

At the early stage of Dupuytren’s Contracture, the hard lumps in the palm are called nodules. They go away on their own in a small number of patients, but they usually progress. They stay for months or years before anything else happens.

Although many types of treatment have been tried for early stages, few have shown a benefit. “A long-lasting cortisone injection into the nodules has the ability to turn the disease process off, at least temporarily. This delays Dupuytren’s contracture progression. In some cases, a series of injections are needed for best results.

Leave a comment