A 68-year-old woman presented with a three-month history of a very painful left thumb. She denied any history of injury and reported new hypersensitivity to cold of the same thumb nail. On examination, she had exquisite tenderness at the nail fold. The patient had well kept and polished nails with the exception of the symptomatic thumb, which was trimmed but unpolished (Figure 1). She reported that polishing the nail was too painful. A diagnosis of glomus tumour was made and surgical excision undertaken. This confirmed the diagnosis and resolved her symptoms.
Glomus tumours are rare and usually benign lesions arising from the vascular and thermoregulatory glomus body of the skin. 1 They are commonly but not exclusively related to the nail bed. The diagnosis is usually made on the basis of the clinical history and examination. 2 Plain radiographs may show “scalloping” of the distal phalanx; however, the absence of changes on plain radiographs does not exclude a glomus tumour. Further imaging may show the tumour. Duplex ultra-sonography or magnetic resonance imaging are particularly useful and enhance the detection of multiple lesions. 1
The classic history is of paroxysmal pain, focal tenderness and hypersensitivity to cold. 1,2 Patients may avoid using the affected digit. This can be a difficult diagnosis to make as there may be very little to find on examination. Patients may notice a bluish discoloration beneath the nail, and the nail fold may become elevated as the tumour proliferates within the enclosed space. The differential diagnoses should include local infection or osteomyelitis, osteoid osteoma, painful conditions of the nail, malignancy and inclusion cysts.
The treatment is surgical excision and the prospects for complete resolution of symptoms are good if excision is complete. Recurrence is unusual and is most likely related to incomplete excision or undetected multiple lesions. 3 Malignant change has been reported but is extremely rare. Malignant glomus tumours are usually locally invasive, although they may metastasize. 4
Given the paucity of reliable clinical signs, a high level of suspicion is required to make the diagnosis on the basis of a good history, supported when necessary with imaging. Presentation with a painful and unpolished or untrimmed finger nail, particularly when the history is suggestive, should alert the clinician to the possibility of an underlying glomus tumour.
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Previously published at www.cmaj.ca
This article has been peer reviewed.
Competing interests: None declared.
REFERENCES
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