Chondrodermatitis nodularis helicis (Winkler)
Last Updated: 2026-06-01
Author(s): Navarini A.
ICD11: -
Actinic Keratosis with Erosion
Verrucae vulgaresGouty tophus
Elastotic nodules of the ear
Nodular melanoma in a pigmented lesion
Calcinosis cutis (skin calcification)
Rare: nodular melanoma (when presenting as a pigmented lesion)
Chondrodermatitis nodularis helicis
Chondrodermatitis nodularis chronica helicis
Winkler disease
Chondrodermatitis nodularis antihelicis
Benign, chronic inflammatory, pressure-painful lesion of the auricle, usually located on the helix and less commonly on the antihelix. Typically, it presents as a solitary, firm nodule a few millimeters in size or as a papulonodular lesion with a central crust, erosion, or ulceration. The cardinal symptom is marked localized tenderness to pressure, often especially at night when lying on the affected ear.
The condition primarily affects older adults and is more common in men than in women. Children are affected only exceptionally. A reliable population-based incidence has not been established.
Chronic inflammatory, non-malignant disease of the auricle.
The pathogenesis has not been fully clarified. The most plausible explanation is local pressure-induced ischemia in the setting of anatomically minimal soft tissue coverage over the auricular cartilage.
Probable predisposing factors
repeated pressure, especially due to sleeping position
chronic mechanical irritation, for example from spectacle frames, headphones, headsets, helmets, or hearing aids
local hypoperfusion of the skin-cartilage area
possibly additional actinic pre-damage or cold exposure
For clinical practice, the key point is: persistent local pressure is the most important modifiable factor.
Typically, there is a single painful papule or small nodule on the helix or antihelix, usually measuring 4–10 mm.
Key clinical features
marked localized tenderness to pressure
worsening pain when lying on the affected ear
central crust, erosion, or small ulceration
firm consistency, sharply demarcated lesion
surrounding erythema may be present
Pain is often clearly disproportionate to the size of the lesion. Pruritus is not a leading symptom. Exudation or slight bleeding may occur after manipulation or detachment of the crust.
The diagnosis is usually clinical.
Typical constellation
solitary painful lesion
typical location on the helix or antihelix
chronic course
pronounced pressure pain, often with sleep disturbance
Dermoscopy
May be supportive. Described findings include a central crust or ulceration with peripheral vascular structures on an erythematous or whitish fibrotic background. Dermoscopy does not replace histology when the biological nature of the lesion is uncertain.
When to biopsy?
atypical morphology
absence of pain
rapid growth
marked hyperkeratosis
pigmentation
recurrent or treatment-resistant lesion
any clinical suspicion of squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, or another neoplasm
Laboratory investigations are generally not required.
Almost always on the auricle.
Typical sites
helix, especially the upper or lateral rim
less commonly the antihelix
In most cases, the lesion is unilateral and solitary.
localized ear pain present for weeks to months
pain especially at night or when sleeping on one side
patient avoids lying on the affected side
often recollection of chronic pressure or friction
no systemic symptoms
A practically useful direct question is: “Does it hurt when you sleep on this ear?”
Histology is not highly specific, but serves primarily to exclude malignant differential diagnoses.
Typical findings
epidermal hyperkeratosis, often with parakeratosis
central erosion or ulceration
acanthosis or pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia may be present
inflammatory infiltrate in the dermis
degenerative changes in the collagenous connective tissue
frequent signs of perichondritis; cartilage involvement may be present
The decisive point is the absence of a malignant epithelial tumor.
chronic pain
sleep disturbance
persistence over months
recurrence if pressure persists
scarring after interventional or surgical treatment
rarely, secondary bacterial superinfection of ulcerated lesions
Benign, but often persistent. With consistent pressure relief and appropriate therapy, symptom improvement is frequently achievable. Recurrences are possible, especially if pressure reduction is inadequate or the pressure-exposed cartilage area is not completely addressed.
The most important preventive measure is consistent pressure relief of the auricle.
Practical measures
change sleeping position
use a pillow with a cut-out or a donut/ear pillow
reduce pressure from spectacle frames, headsets, helmets, or hearing aids
avoid local friction
consider ear protection in cold exposure
The therapeutic goal is freedom from pain while simultaneously relieving pressure and excluding a malignant process.
First-line: conservative pressure relief
Consistent pressure reduction is the most important initial measure and should almost always be part of treatment.
Proven practical measures
donut pillow or pillow with an ear cut-out for nighttime use
foam, silicone, or felt padding for local offloading
adjustment of spectacles, headset, helmet, or hearing aid
In many patients, pain and inflammation improve significantly with consistent offloading alone.
Topical and intralesional options
These methods may be used as adjunctive treatment, especially for small lesions or when surgery is to be avoided.
Possible options
topical corticosteroids: may reduce inflammation and irritation, but are often insufficient as monotherapy
topical nitroglycerin: described as a vasodilatory approach; may be effective, but practical use is limited by possible headache and local irritation
intralesional triamcinolone: may be attempted, although success rates are variable and recurrences are not uncommon
Evidence for diltiazem and other local treatments is limited; they are not standard therapy.
Other non-surgical procedures
Cryotherapy, laser-based procedures, or photodynamic therapy have been described, but mostly only in small series or case reports. They are more suitable in selected situations when conservative measures are insufficient and surgery is to be avoided.
Surgical therapy
In cases of persistent pain, recurrence, unclear diagnosis, or failed conservative treatment, surgery is a very good option.
Principles
excision of the lesion
concomitant treatment of the underlying pressure-exposed or altered cartilage segment
careful smoothing of remaining cartilage edges
Common procedures
skin and cartilage excision
skin-sparing excision with cartilage resection
depending on defect size, primary closure or local reconstruction
The specific technique depends on location, defect size, and cosmetic requirements. For recurrence prevention, the key is not only removal of the visible lesion, but also elimination of the mechanically problematic cartilage area.
Practical notes and pitfalls
Before destructive treatment, always consider squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma.
In atypical, hyperkeratotic, pigmented, or rapidly growing lesions, histologic confirmation should be obtained first.
Without consistent pressure relief, both conservative and surgical procedures carry a risk of recurrence.
Pain is often the leading symptom; a small lesion may be highly clinically relevant.
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