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It’s a noticeable attribute for King Charles. After shaking hands with President Donald Trump, King Charles’ “sausage fingers” are getting the spotlight once again.
When the White House posted a picture of Donald Trump posing with King Charles during his second state visit, few people observed that the monarch had his hands behind his back for a reason. One posted on X, “I wonder why King Charles is hiding his hands??? Sausage fingers? Trump may have swollen ankles, but Charlie has sausage fingers.”

The monarch has commented on his condition in years past. In the BBC documentary, Charles III: The Coronation Year, Charles jokes about it with his son, Prince William. “On the day, that’s not going to go in,” William said about putting a robe on his father, to which Charles heartily replied: “No, you haven’t got sausage fingers like mine.”
Queen Elizabeth even commented on the uniqueness of her son’s hands during his birth. She wrote to her music teacher: “The baby is very sweet and we are enormously proud of him. He has an interesting pair of hands for a baby. They are rather large, but with fine long fingers quite unlike mine and certainly unlike his father’s. It will be interesting to see what they become. I still find it hard to believe I have a baby of my own!”
GP Chun Tang, Medical Director at Pall Mall Medical, told the Daily Mail about the symptoms: “Often puffy fingers are a symptom of water retention, which can be caused by numerous health conditions. This condition arises due to inflammation. Other possibilities include high salt levels, allergic reactions [and] medicinal side effects.” The technical term for the condition is dactylitis.
The “sausage fingers” resurfacing comes after reports of Charles’ health declining during his cancer diagnosis. A source said that Charles’ health is in steady decline. ”Charles is indeed a sick man, and he does have cancer,” an insider told NewsNationNow. “He also refused chemotherapy and decided on a less invasive treatment.”
Writer and associate editor of the Daily Telegraph, Camilla Tominey, recently said. “The talk now is that he may die ‘with’ cancer, but not ‘of’ cancer following a rigorous treatment program.”
However, Charles’ spirit is still up, telling one patient at the Midland Metropolitan University Hospital in Smethwick in early September, “I’m not too bad, thank you,” and even apologizing for the fact that his cancer kept him from coming a few months before.
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Lea Veloso
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