Dupuytren's
Contracture Institute
Dupuytren's Contracture
Alternative Treatment – Non-surgical and Non-medical
Dupuytren's contracture surgery
does not appeal to most people; actually, any sane person does
what is reasonable to avoid it.
Surgery
for Dupuytren's contracture becomes even more distasteful when
it is learned that there are simple non-surgical options that
might help avoid it. The idea that fibrous tissue contracture of
the hand can be treated with Alternative Medicine (vitamins,
minerals, enzymes, exercise, massage, and other disciplines) is
of great interest and benefit to those who take the time to
investigate these possibilities.
This website is presented by the
Dupuytren's Contracture Institute (DCI). In it you can
thoroughly explore the best of the available
Alternative Medicine options that can be used to assist
the body to attempt reduction and even elimination of the
fibrous thickening of Dupuytren's contracture. The reader will
find helpful information to create an aggressive and focused
alternative treatment plan against this frustrating and limiting
problem, using an abundance of exciting therapy choices with
good science behind them.

DCI’s
goal is to help you to your best level of recovery – whatever
that might be. If you want to do as much as you can to avoid
hand surgery – maybe even to restore some useful hand function –
you have come to the right place.
While no one has an easy or sure cure for Dupuytren's
contracture, DCI uses safe and well-researched alternative
options that are supported by considerable scientific research.
Standard medical treatment currently favors a surgical approach
when the condition becomes advanced. However, for many people,
surgical measures are an extreme to be avoided if at all
possible. That is what this website is all about: How to go
about treating Dupuytren's contracture with conservative
Alternative Medicine methods, so that surgery might be avoided.
Standard Medical Treatment
After reading about Dupuytren's contracture at a few of the
various medical websites, it becomes obvious that this is not a
high priority problem for the medical profession. Most websites
discussing this subject are rather small, and repeat the same
basic information over and over again. It soon becomes obvious
that there is not much interest in treating this condition –
other than the use of surgery.
The average MD follows a few simple guidelines to determine if
surgery is needed: 1. How useful is the hand with Dupuytren's
contracture; can the basic activities of daily living still be
performed? 2. How bad is the pain; is the pain more than the
patient can tolerate? If the answers to these two questions
indicate that the problem is only mild or “acceptable”, meaning
the hand is not useless, and the pain is not great, then surgery
will not be done – and the patient is left untreated. When the
problem is “not bad enough” my medical standards, the patient is
left to learn to live with a hand that does not look right, does
not feel right, and does not work right.
The standard way of handling an “acceptable” or mild Dupuytren's
contracture is to have the patient reschedule for a visit once
or twice a year, so the condition can be monitored to determine
if and when the contracture is “ripe” for surgery.
DCI maintains that these people who are not surgical candidates
– and those that want to avoid surgery – need to learn about
safe alternative methods to treat this problem.

Dupuytren's Contracture Institute is Different
If you recently have been diagnosed with Dupuytren's contracture
and you are not satisfied with the standard wait-and-see method
of watching your hand “ripen” until it is ready for the surgeon,
please read Dupuytren's Contracture and Russian Roulette Have
Something in Common. It will give you a different perspective
about the wisdom of gambling with the wait-and-see treatment
approach. You will come to understand that while you are doing
nothing but hoping that your hand will not later require
surgery, you are also wasting valuable treatment time; safely
working with Alternative Medicine to soften and reduce the
contracture. In this website we discuss Dupuytren's treatment options – lots
of them – to increase your chance to recover with less
contracture, less pain and less loss of hand function. The DCI
goal is to keep a small problem small, and maybe even help the
body to eliminate the fibrous thickening on the palm of the
hand. This website presents interesting treatment options you
might not know about, and brought them together for you, all in
one location. There are
many people who have followed the complimentary
and alternative medicine strategies for treating Dupuytren's
contracture, and succeeded. You could be one of them. There is
only one way to find out: try it and see what happens for you.
You might be surprised. Please explore this website, and determine for yourself if there
are not some wonderful treatment options to use in your effort
to get ahead of Dupuytren's contracture.
Welcome to DCI.
For ideas and suggestions to organize an effective Alternative
Medicine treatment plan, click
Create Dupuytren's Treatment Plan.
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