aetiology
Last edited 06/2021 and last reviewed 06/2021
Dupuytren's contracture is associated with:
- manual labour (1)
- uncertainty around the
association between Dupuytren's disease and manual labour, in
particular the use of vibrating tools
- many authors have linked repetitive hand trauma associated with certain occupations to the development of Dupuytren's disease, but a study evidence of the patterns of disease in miners did not find a statistically significant correlation between the two (2)
- uncertainty around the
association between Dupuytren's disease and manual labour, in
particular the use of vibrating tools
- hand
trauma
- most experts would concede, however, that a one-off hand injury can rarely trigger Dupuytren's disease and that a history of manual labour indicates a worse prognosis (1)
- epilepsy / treatment with phenobarbitone
or phenytoin (1)
- controversy exists as to the significance of either anticonvulsant drugs or epilepsy (1)
- link between Dupuytren's disease and epilepsy remains unclear, although latest evidence suggests that the association may be due to the effect of certain antiepileptic medications (2)
- Peyronie's disease
- smoking and excessive alcohol intake are independent risk factors for disease development
- in both cases the relation is dose dependent (odds ratio 1.5-2 for smoking and 1.35-4.2 for alcohol) (1)
- chronic liver disease is not a risk factor independent of alcohol consumption
- a family history of Dupuytren's contracture
- there is a strong genetic association with study evidence showing up to an 80% heritability (2)
- trauma
- myxoedema
-
diabetes mellitus
- more prevalent among people with diabetes, especially those dependent on insulin
- diabetic patients tend to have a milder form of the disease
- hypercholesterolaemia (1)
- patients with Dupuytren's disease have also been noted to have raised serum lipids compared with controls
- AIDS
It may also be idiopathic.
Development of Dupuytren's contracture may result from the disturbed metabolism of oxygen-derived free radicals causing fibroblast proliferation and palmar fibrosis.
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