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UK Dercum’s Disease: Clinical Features, Diagnostic Challenges, Multidisciplinary Care Approaches, and Long-Term Patient
Dercum’s disease is a rare, painful adipose tissue disorder characterized by multiple painful lipomas (benign fatty tumors) accompanied by generalized pain, fatigue, and a range of systemic symptoms.
The condition can significantly impair quality of life due to chronic pain, limited mobility, and psychosocial effects. Clinical presentation varies—patients may present with solitary or multiple nodular lumps, tender subcutaneous masses, and pain that can be disproportionate to the size of lesions. The etiology remains incompletely understood, with hypotheses implicating metabolic dysregulation, neurological involvement, inflammatory processes, and genetic predisposition.
Diagnosis in the UK is often delayed due to rarity and symptom overlap with other conditions like fibromyalgia, lipoedema, or lipomatosis. A careful clinical history, physical exam, imaging (ultrasound or MRI when indicated), and exclusion of alternate diagnoses are key steps. Management is multidisciplinary and individualized: pain control with analgesics, neuropathic pain agents, or local anesthetic injections; surgical options (lipoma excision or reduction)…