Camptodactyly
| Camptodactyly | |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | 
  | 
| Specialty | Medical genetics | 
| Symptoms | Permanent flexion of the proximal interphalangeal joints, although symptoms may vary in person; some people have very tight flexed fingers and other people have flexed fingers that straighten when pressed on | 
| Complications | People with severe camptodactyly may have difficulty holding objects | 
| Usual onset | There are congenital forms, adolescent-onset forms and acquired forms | 
| Duration | Life-long | 
| Treatment | Splinting, surgery, etc. | 
| Frequency | 1% of the world population | 
Camptodactyly is a medical condition that causes one or more digits (fingers or toes) to be permanently bent. It involves fixed flexion deformity of the proximal interphalangeal joints.
Camptodactyly can be caused by a genetic disorder. In that case, it is an autosomal dominant trait that is known for its incomplete genetic expressivity. This means that when a person has the genes for it, the condition may appear in both hands, one, or neither. A linkage scan proposed that the chromosomal locus of camptodactyly was 3q11.2-q13.12.