| Literature DB >> 25050098 |
Matthew R Garner1, Samuel A Taylor1, Elizabeth Gausden1, John P Lyden1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compartment syndrome is an elevation of intracompartmental pressure to a level that impairs circulation. While the most common etiology is trauma, other less common etiologies such as burns, emboli, and iatrogenic injuries can be equally troublesome and challenging to diagnose. The sequelae of a delayed diagnosis of compartment syndrome may be devastating. All care providers must understand the etiologies, high-risk situation, and the urgency of intervention. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: This study was conducted to perform a comprehensive review of compartment syndrome discussing etiologies, risk stratification, clinical progression, noninvasive and invasive monitoring, documentation, medical-legal implication, and our step-by-step approach to compartment syndrome prevention, detection, and early intervention.Entities:
Keywords: compartment syndrome; intracompartmental pressure; ischemia
Year: 2014 PMID: 25050098 PMCID: PMC4071472 DOI: 10.1007/s11420-014-9386-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HSS J ISSN: 1556-3316
Fig. 1Step-by-step instructions to using intracompartmental measurement devices. Note that there may be variability based on a specific device and instructions should be followed.
Major orthopedic case series and reports from 2003 to 2013 reporting compartment syndrome in association with the use of regional anesthesia [2, 6, 8, 11, 13, 22, 24, 50]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haggis [ | Total knee arthroplasty | Epidural | Lower leg | Case series of 7 patients with this complication; 5/7 had resulting foot drops, 1 patient had a below the knee amputation. The authors reported that several patients had vascular compromise or intraoperative vascular injuries | Delay |
| Kumar et al. [ | Total joint arthroplasty | Epidural | Gluteal | Case series of 4 patients. Diagnosed at 20, 28, 19, and 43 h. The case treated at 43 h was the 1 patient that had resulting disability. An ankle paralysis was not noticed until the epidural was discontinued. Of note, all 4 patients only began noting pain after the epidural was discontinued | Delay 1/4 |
| Uzel and Steinmann [ | Intramedullary femur nailing | Femoral nerve block | Thigh | Case report of a 26-year-old male patient with thigh ACS. Diagnosis made on POD 1, 15 h after surgery. Diagnosed after patient complained of new, severe pain. Fasciotomies performed and no complications or sequelae | No delay |
| Cometa et al. [ | Distal femur and proximal tibia osteotomy | Femoral and sciatic nerve block/catheter | Lower leg | Case report of a 15-year-old male who developed ACS after a distal femur and proximal tibia osteotomy. Continuous femoral and sciatic nerve block/catheters were used with 0.2% ropivacaine at 10 cc/h. No pain on POD 1 escalating to “severe” pain on POD 2. Authors reported “tissue loss” | Possible delay |
| Lareau et al. [ | Total knee arthroplasty | Femoral nerve block | Thigh | Case series of nerve block complications in TKA, including 1 compartment syndrome in a 73-year-old male patient. The patient received a femoral nerve block. Anterior thigh compartment syndrome diagnosed on POD 1 due to increased pain as reported by the patient. Fasciotomies performed with no long-term sequelae | No delay |
Fig. 2Basic components of a comprehensive compartment check. The main three tasks are physical exam, evaluating the patient’s subjective symptoms, and tracking the patient’s analgesic requirements.
Fig. 3Our algorithm for interventions based on a patient’s subjective report, physical findings, and analgesic requirements.