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Surgical Notes
- Clinical
- General Approach
- Superficial lesions
- Head and Neck
- Lump & ulcers
- Neck examination
- Skin
- Basal cell carcinoma
- Dermatofibroma
- Dermoid cyst
- Finger / Digital Clubbing
- Furuncle
- Grafts and Flaps
- Hiadrenitis suppurativa
- Hypertrophic and keloid scars
- Kaposi sarcoma
- Keratoacanthoma
- Malignant Melanoma
- Neurofibromata
- Papilloma
- Pyogenic Granuloma
- Radiotherapy Marks
- Seborrhoeic keratosis (basal cell papilloma / senile keratosis)
- Solar Keratosis
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Vascular malformations
- Thyroid examination
- Orthopaedics and Neurosurgery
- Circulatory System
- The Trunk
- Communication Skills
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Finger / Digital Clubbing
Pathophysiology
- Vasodilation of nail-bed vessels secondary to an unidentified mediator (candidates - ferritin, bradykinin, prostaglandin, 5-HT) which is normally inactivated in the lung but may persist in those with digital clubbing where inactivation is defective or there is a right-to-left shunt
- Increased growth hormone
- Organs supplied by the vagus are affected by digital clubbing - vagotomy can reverse digital clubbing in bronchial carcinoma
- Tumour necrosis factor
- Increased PDGF and FGF
Causes of digital clubbing:
- Idiopathic - by far the commonest
- Secondary :
Gastrointestinal Respiratory Cardiac Rare - Cirrhosis (esp PBC)
- IBD (esp Crohn's)
- Malabsorption (coeliac, tropical sprue)
- GI lymphoma
- Bronchial carcinoma (most commonly squamous cell)
- Chronic suppurative lung disease (abscess, bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis, empyema)
- Fibrosing alveolitis
- Mesothelioma
- Congenital cyanotic heart diseases (Fallot's, transposition)
- Infective endocarditis
- Atrial myxoma (rare)
- Familial
- Grave's disease - pseudoclubbing (thyroid acropachy)
- Unilateral - seen in axillary artery aneurysm and brachial AV malformation
Approach
- Spot diagnosis
- Expose hands to above the elbows
- Ask patient to place palms upwards on a pillow

- Inspection
- Exaggerated anteroposterior and longitudinal curvature of the nails
- Loss of angle between nail and nail bed (demonstrated by "Lovidond's diamond sign")
- "Drumstick" or "parrot beak" appearance of the nail - doigts hippocratique
- Palpation
- Bogginess / fluctuation of nail bed
- Elicit by supporting patient's finger with two thumbs
Grading of Clubbing
| Grade I |
Increased glossiness and cyanosis of skin at the root of the nail associated with increased fluctuation at the base of the nail bed |
| Grade II |
Loss of angle between nail and nail bed |
| Grade III |
Drumstick appearance of nail |
| Grade IV |
Bony changes involving wrists and ankles, sometimes the elbows and knees |
Completion
- Palpate wrist joint for tenderness
- Seen in hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy - rapid painful digital clubbing nearly always due to bronchial carcinoma
- Examine toes for digital clubbing
- History and examine patient for causes of clubbing