The goal of treatment is to ensure your child’s hand or foot has the most function and best appearance possible.
In mild cases, treatment may involve watching your child’s hand or foot carefully over time.
In more severe cases, your child’s doctor may recommend surgery. Unfortunately, there is no simple procedure for thinning and shortening the affected fingers or toes since all parts of the digits (bones, tendons, nerves, blood vessels) are larger than normal.
Your child’s doctor may recommend some combination of the following surgical procedures:
- Soft tissue debulking, which aims to correct the width of your child’s affected digits. It involves the surgical removal of the thickened layers of skin and fat and the replacement of skin with healthy skin. This procedure is usually performed in several stages around three months apart. It’s more often used to treat the milder forms of macrodactyly or as a part of the treatment of the more progressive forms.
- Shortening procedures, which aim to correct length and usually involve surgical removal of a section of bone from affected area.
- Ray resection, which involves surgical removal of the entire finger or toe. This may be recommended when the condition is progressive, and the affected fingers or toes grow at a faster rate than the rest of the hand or foot.