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In medicine, clubbing (or digital clubbing) is a deformity of the fingers and fingernails that is associated with a number of diseases, mostly of the heart and lungs. Idiopathic clubbing can also occur. Hippocrates was probably the first to document clubbing as a sign of disease, and the phenomenon is therefore accasionally called Hippocratic fingers.
Clubbing develops in five steps (Myers et al):
When encountering clubbing in a patient, a doctor will conduct a detailed medical interview (e.g. smoking history) and a physical examination to find positive clues of associated disease. Generally, an X-ray of the chest is also made.
Clubbing is associated with:
Although many of these associations are recognised (such as the link with lung cancer), some are based on a few observations and might be false. Prospective studies of patients presenting with clubbing have not been performed, and hence there are no reliable numbers as to the distribution of the causes and the prognosis.
A special form of clubbing is hypertrophic pulmonary osteo-arthropathy, known in continental Europe as Pierre Marie-Bamberger syndrome. This is the combination of clubbing and thickening of periosteum (connective tissue lining of the bones) and synovium (lining of joints), and is often initially diagnosed as arthritis. It is associated almost exclusively with lung cancer.
Primary hypertrophic osteo-arthropathy is HPOA without signs of pulmonary disease. This form has a hereditary component, although subtle cardiac abnormalties can occasionally be found. It is known in continental Europe as the Touraine-Solente-Golé syndrome.
Even though clubbing is a well established physical finding in many diseases, the physiological mechanism that actually causes clubbing is not well established. Current understanding is that these diseases cause vasodilation in the distal circulation which leads to hypertrophy of the tissue of the nailbeds and thus to the clubbed fingernails.
Other factors that have been implicated are secretion of growth factors (such as