Guest guest Posted November 2, 2006 Report Share Posted November 2, 2006 that is a great collection of articles. Thank you so much. It must have taken you ages. I know how long I take to get through things, and as you said, there are so many interesting looking ones that I nearly always go off on tangents. I'll work my way through them and see if anything sounds familiar. As you said, the index finger and thumb don't seem to get D's contracture, and so I'm wondering if I could have both tenosynovitis and D's contracture, or just one of them ... or something like the " pseudo-Dupuytren's " . I really appreciate your time and effort - I didn't find anywhere near half that stuff. Thank you! AnneMarie Irish in Japan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 2, 2006 Report Share Posted November 2, 2006 AnneMarie, You are very welcome. I hope you can narrow down the possibilities. I see some of the links are failing. Sorry about that. You can try the following: ******************************** Instead of that PDF I listed from Skin & Aging: " Pharmacotherapy Update: Managing Hyperkeratotic Eczema of the Hands and Feet " : http://www.skinandaging.com/article/4257 ******************************** " Palmoplantar Lesions in Psoriasis: A Study of 3065 Patients " http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/index/680HHT7LJ8EY9VEF.pdf (this won't be a PDF, but you can read the abstract) ******************************** HandWorld " Trigger Finger " : http://www.eatonhand.com/hw/hw022.htm ******************************** I'm still trying to figure out how I hacked into the Cutis article. Not an MD I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org [ ] , thank you!! > > that is a great collection of articles. Thank you so much. > It must have taken you ages. > I know how long I take to get through things, and as you said, there are > so > many interesting looking ones that I nearly always go off on tangents. > > I'll work my way through them and see if anything sounds familiar. As you > said, the index finger and thumb don't seem to get D's contracture, and so > I'm wondering if I could have both tenosynovitis and D's contracture, or > just one of them ... or something like the " pseudo-Dupuytren's " . > > I really appreciate your time and effort - I didn't find anywhere near > half > that stuff. > Thank you! > > AnneMarie > Irish in Japan > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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