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[3]: 100 [4]: 245 Localized TGCT tumors are typically 0.5 cm-4 cm), [3]: 101 develop over years, [3]: 100 are benign and non-destructive to the surrounding tissue, and may reoccur in the affected area. [3]: 101 The most common symptom is painless swelling. [3]: 101 Localized TGCT most often occurs in fingers, but can also occur in other joints ...
Paroxysmal hand hematoma, also known as Achenbach syndrome, is a skin condition characterized by spontaneous focal hemorrhage into the palm or the volar surface of a finger, which results in transitory localized pain, followed by rapid swelling and localized blueish discoloration.
A localized disease is an infectious or neoplastic process that originates in and is confined to one organ system or general area in the body, [1] such as a sprained ankle, a boil on the hand, an abscess of finger. A localized cancer that has not extended beyond the margins of the organ involved can also be described as localized disease, while ...
Nail clubbing, also known as digital clubbing or clubbing, is a deformity of the finger or toe nails associated with a number of diseases, anomalies and defects, some congenital, mostly of the heart and lungs. [2] [3] When it occurs together with joint effusions, joint pains, and abnormal skin and bone growth it is known as hypertrophic ...
Localized cicatricial pemphigoid (Brunsting–Perry cicatricial pemphigoid) Paraneoplastic pemphigus; Pemphigus erythematosus (Senear–Usher syndrome) Pemphigus foliaceus; Pemphigus herpetiformis (acantholytic herpetiform dermatitis, herpetiform pemphigus, mixed bullous disease, pemphigus controlled by sulfapyridine) Pemphigoid nodularis ...
There are also a number of other conditions that affect hands, feet, and parts of the face with associated skin color changes that need to be differentiated from acrocyanosis: Raynaud phenomenon, pernio, acrorygosis, erythromelalgia, and blue finger syndrome. The diagnosis may be challenging in some cases, especially when these syndromes co-exist.
A ganglion cyst is a fluid-filled bump associated with a joint or tendon sheath. [3] It most often occurs at the back of the wrist, followed by the front of the wrist. [3] [4] ...
The digits at the borders of the cleft might be syndactilyzed, and one or more digits can be absent. In most types, the thumb, ring finger and little finger are the less affected parts of the hand. [7] The incidence of cleft hand varies from 1 in 90,000 to 1 in 10,000 births depending on the used classification.