Clinical and functional outcomes of acute lower extremity compartment syndrome at a Major Trauma Hospital
Loading...
Date
Authors
Lollo, Loreto
Grabinsky, Andreas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science | Published by Wolters Kluwer - Medknow
Abstract
Background: Acute lower extremity compartment syndrome (CS) is a condition that
untreated causes irreversible nerve and muscle ischemia. Treatment by decompression
fasciotomy without delay prevents permanent disability. The use of intracompartmental
pressure (iCP) measurement in uncertain situations aids in diagnosis of severe leg
pain. As an infrequent complication of lower extremity trauma, consequences of CS
include chronic pain, nerve injury, and contractures. The purpose of this study was
to observe the clinical and functional outcomes for patients with lower extremity CS
after fasciotomy.
Methods: Retrospective chart analysis for patients with a discharge diagnosis of CS was
performed. Physical demographics, employment status, activity at time of injury, injury
severity score, fracture types, pain scores, hours to fasciotomy, iCP, serum creatine
kinase levels, wound treatment regimen, length of hospital stay, and discharge facility
were collected. Lower extremity neurologic examination, pain scores, orthopedic
complications, and employment status at 30 days and 12 months after discharge were
noted.
Results: One hundred twenty‑four patients were enrolled in this study. One hundred and
eight patients were assessed at 12 months. Eighty‑one percent were male. Motorized
vehicles caused 51% of injuries in males. Forty‑one percent of injuries were tibia fractures.
Acute kidney injury occurred in 2.4%. Mean peak serum creatine kinase levels were
58,600 units/ml. Gauze dressing was used in 78.9% of nonfracture patients and negative
pressure wound vacuum therapy in 78.2% of fracture patients. About 21.6% of patients with
CS had prior surgery. Nearly 12.9% of patients required leg amputation. Around 81.8% of
amputees were male. Sixty‑seven percent of amputees had associated vascular injuries.
Foot numbness occurred in 20.5% of patients and drop foot palsy in 18.2%. Osteomyelitis
developed in 10.2% of patients and fracture nonunion in 6.8%. About 14.7% of patients
underwent further orthopedic surgery. At long‑term follow‑up, 10.2% of patients reported
moderate lower extremity pain and 69.2% had returned to work.
Conclusion: Escalation in leg pain and changes in sensation are
the cardinal signs for CS rather than reliance on assessing for
firm compartments and pressures. The severity of nerve injury
worsens with the delay in performing fasciotomy. Standardized
diagnostic protocols and wound treatment strategies will
result in improved outcomes from this complication.
Description
Citation
Lollo L, Grabinsky A. Clinical and functional outcomes of acute lower extremity compartment syndrome at a Major Trauma Hospital. Int J Crit Illn Inj Sci 2016;6:133-42.
