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Dactylitis is diffuse swelling of an entire finger or toe (“sausage digit”), involving the soft tissues, synovium, tendon sheaths, and sometimes bone. It is not a disease itself but a clinical/radiological sign seen in various inflammatory, infectious, and infiltrative disorders.
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Dactylitis results from inflammation of flexor tendon sheaths (tenosynovitis), synovium, and periarticular soft tissues, sometimes with bone involvement.
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Mechanisms differ by cause:
Common Causes of Dactylitis
| Domain | Etiology |
|---|---|
| Inflammatory / Rheumatologic | • Psoriatic arthritis (most common cause in adults). |
| • Reactive arthritis. | |
| • Other seronegative spondyloarthropathies. | |
| Hematologic | Sickle cell disease: especially in children <6 yrs, painful hand-foot syndrome. |
| Infectious | • Tuberculosis → spina ventosa. |
| • Syphilis (congenital). | |
| • Pyogenic osteomyelitis. | |
| Granulomatous / Infiltrative | • Sarcoidosis. |
| • Amyloidosis. | |
| • Gout (tophaceous deposits). |
Different types of dactylitis with the involved tissues: https://doi.org/10.1080/03009740600906677
| Type of dactylitis | Type of involvement |
|---|---|
| Tuberculous dactylitis | Osteomyelitis extending to digit soft tissue |
| Syphilitic dactylitis | Osteomyelitis |
| Sarcoid dactylitis | Non‐caseating granulomas invading the phalanges and adjacent soft tissue |
| Blistering distal dactylitis | Infection of the anterior fat pad of the volar surface of the distal part of the finger or toe |
| Sickle cell disease dactylitis | Infarction of bone marrow |
| Spondyloarthritis dactylitis | Flexor tenosynovitis |
Associated systemic/primary disease clues: