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What Are Knuckle Pads?

Rebecca Harkin
Rebecca Harkin

Knuckle pads are round, hard, callous-like skin lesions that develop on the middle knuckle or the distal knuckle located near the tip of the finger. These pads are produced by a thickening and hardening of the epidermis, the most superficial layer of skin. They are often referred to as heloderma because the pads look like the scaly skin of a Gila monster.

Benign and typically painless, knuckle pads do not usually hinder finger movement. The main issue with these pads is cosmetic. Pads on the knuckle are fairly noticeable due to their size and because the appearance of the pads is sometimes one shade lighter than the normal skin tone. The pads can be as small as 0.1 inch (3mm) or as large as 0.8 inch (20mm) and cover the entire knuckle.

Callous-like skin lesions that develop on the knuckles may be referred to as knuckle pads.
Callous-like skin lesions that develop on the knuckles may be referred to as knuckle pads.

The exact cause of this cutaneous condition is unknown. Knuckle pads are associated with repeated trauma to the knuckles or picking at the knuckles following an injury or an insect bite. They are often found on the hands of boxers and people who engage in physical work that frequently traumatizes fingers. Children are prone to this condition since they are more likely to pick at an injury or bite.

Trauma to the knuckles may lead to the development of knuckle pads.
Trauma to the knuckles may lead to the development of knuckle pads.

Knuckle pads are sometimes found on people with bulimia who use their fingers or knuckles to induce vomiting. This skin problem is also strongly associated with Dupuytren’s contracture, a condition in which scar tissue develops on the palm of the hand. These pads are also associated with camptodactyly, a condition where the fingers become progressively and permanently bent. The propensity to develop these pads tends to run in families, suggesting that there is a genetic component to the manifestation of this condition.

Boxers commonly experience knuckle pads.
Boxers commonly experience knuckle pads.

These skin lesions will sometimes spontaneously shrink and disappear over time. This is often true when the knuckle pads were caused by trauma or picking and these issues are stopped. If heloderma persists, there are a few treatment options. Knuckle pads can be treated with corticosteroid injections, which tenderizes the pads and gradually reduces their size.

Corticosteroid injections may help treat knuckle pads.
Corticosteroid injections may help treat knuckle pads.

When this condition does not respond to steroid injections and does not shrink on its own, the last resort is outpatient surgery. During surgery, a local anesthesia is used to numb the finger and then the thickened, superficial skin is cut away. Great care must be taken following the surgery to prevent trauma to the wound and keep another pad from growing over the surgical site.

Discussion Comments

anon995174

I've been biting my knuckles for three years and it won't stop. I hate how my knuckles look but it's hard to stop. I don't have a particular feeling when I'm doing it. I could be bored or sad, or happy and I'd be doing it. The problem is that I never know when I do it. It's become a really bad habit.

anon291867

The appearance of the pads can also be a shade darker than your skin also, and not just lighter.

behaviourism

When I was little I had one of these on one of my fingers because I sucked my finger (not my thumb, but my index finger. No, I don't know why the difference either). Since I was a kid I didn't really know how to fix it, though eventually I stopped sucking my finger and after a few years (it had gotten pretty pronounced), it finally went away completely.

It didn't cause any knuckle pain for me and was not even exactly on the knuckle, though, so I imagine some people's experiences with this are much worse.

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    • Callous-like skin lesions that develop on the knuckles may be referred to as knuckle pads.
      By: Stocksnapper
      Callous-like skin lesions that develop on the knuckles may be referred to as knuckle pads.
    • Trauma to the knuckles may lead to the development of knuckle pads.
      By: ferrerilavarialiotti
      Trauma to the knuckles may lead to the development of knuckle pads.
    • Boxers commonly experience knuckle pads.
      By: Tadija Savic
      Boxers commonly experience knuckle pads.
    • Corticosteroid injections may help treat knuckle pads.
      By: evgenyb
      Corticosteroid injections may help treat knuckle pads.