Compartmental Syndromes.
Edited By: Frederick A. Matsen III, M.D., Winston J. Warme, MD Last updated Thursday, February 10, 2005
EtiologiesEtiologies of compartmental syndromes A compartmental syndrome may occur whenever tissue pressure within a
limited space rises to the point that it compromises local circulation
and function.
The two prerequisites for a compartmental syndrome are (a) a
limiting envelope surrounding tissue and (b) a cause of increased
tissue pressure within that envelope.
A wide variety of etiologies may produce a sufficient increase in local tissue pressure to cause a compartmental syndrome.
The relative frequency of the different etiologies may differ dramatically in different patient populations.
Postischemic swelling is a particularly sinister cause of a compartmental syndrome.
By definition, a compartmental syndrome is produced when the tissue
pressure within a limited space rises to the point where the
circulation and function of the tissues within that space are
compromised.
There are therefore two prerequisites for the production of a
compartmental syndrome: (a) an envelope limiting the available space
and (b) a cause of increased pressure within that envelope.
The first prerequisite, a limiting envelope, may be any structure of
limited compliance that surrounds tissue. Several different materials
may compose these limiting envelopes. Envelopes may consist of fascia
and bone, as in the anterior compartment of the leg, or may consist of
fascia alone, as in the gluteal compartment. l The skin may serve as a
limiting envelope in burned extremities or in cases in which the skin
has been closed after surgical opening of the fascia. 2-7 Even the
connective tissue layer that surrounds each muscle, the epimysium, may
serve as the limiting envelope in a compartmental syndrome. 8- 9
Limiting envelopes may also be produced by the physician in the form of
tight external dressings or casts. In 1881, Volkmann provided one of
the first written descriptions of circulatory compromise from tight
dressings. His identifications of externally applied pressure as a
cause of muscle ischemia is important, even though he incorrectly
attributed the ischemia to arterial occlusion. Edgar Bick's translation
of this description is reproduced below: 10
For many years I have noted on occasion, following the use of
bandages too tightly applied, the occurrence of paralysis and
contraction of the limb, not, as has been previously assumed, due to
paralysis of the nerve by pressure, but as a quick and massive
disintegration of the contractile substance and the effect of the
ensuing reaction and degeneration. The paralysis and contracture are to
be understood as purely myogenic.
A series of new experiences has merely confirmed the correctness of
this assertion, and also produced certain views about the character of
the process here in question. Accordingly, I might summarize my views
in the following sentences:
- The paralyses and contractures appearing after too tight bandaging
of the forearm and hand, less frequently in the lower extremity, are to
be considered ischemic. They are caused by prolonged blocking of
arterial blood. The almost simultaneous occurrence of massive venous
stasis manifests itself at the beginning of the paralysis only to
accelerate its progress.
- The paralysis is based upon the fact that the muscle bundles, too
long deprived of their acids become necrotic. The contractile substance
coagulates, disintegrates into clumps and will be resolved later. The
ensuing contracture is thereby to be understood above all as simply
rigor mortis and shows the paralyzed and contracted limb-if as usual
the entire musculature of a limb or part of a limb is affected-always
in the same position which we find in the limbs of rigor mortis.
- Characteristically, the paralysis and contracture appear
simultaneously or follow immediately after one or the other, while in
paralysis of nerve origin in the extremity the contracture develops
gradually, and often much later; months and years pass before a
deformity develops that cannot be overcome by immediate passive
hand-power.
- On the contrary, ischemic contracture shows its nature from the
first moment by the great resistance it opposes to straightening the
limb. The affected muscles have already completely and immediately lost
their elasticity as in rigor mortis and are completely stiff.
- The reactive and regenerating processes, always very imperfect in
man, following the disintegration of the contractile substance, make
the diseased muscles even more unyielding and further increase the
contracture by cicatrization.
- Ischemic paralysis and contraction of similar character also occur
after application of any tight bandage, too long continuation of an
Esmarch constriction of the limbs, and also after lacerations and
contusions of large vessels, and perhaps also after long periods of
severe cold.
The second prerequisite for a compartmental syndrome, a cause of
increased pressure within the envelope, may be a decrease in the volume
of the envelope, an increase in the content within the envelope, or the
application of pressure to the outside of the envelope. Whitesides et
al 11 and Hargens et al 12 sequentially increased the content of a
dog's anterior compartment while observing the resulting changes in
intracompartmental pressure. The initial increases in compartmental
content produced only small increments in intracompartmental pressure;
thus lax fascia appears to have a significant compliance. With
increasing compartmental content, intracompartmental pressure rose more
steeply, that is, the fascial compliance progressively diminished. This
pressure content relationship is further emphasized by data of
Whitesides et al 11 from an amputated human leg: a 30% increase in the
content of the anterior compartment from 110% to 140% of normal raised
the intracompartmental pressure only 20 mm Hg (from 10 to 30 mm Hg),
whereas a 30% increase in content from 150% to 180% of normal caused
the intracompartmental pressure to rise 75 mm Hg (from 45 to 120 mm
Hg).
Any cause of locally increased tissue pressure is a potential cause for a compartmental syndrome:
Decreased compartmental volume:
- closure of fascial defects
- application of excessive traction to fractured limbs.
Increased compartmental content:
- bleeding
- vascular injury
- bleeding disorder
- anticoagulants
- increased capillary filtration
- increased capillary permeability
- post ischemic reperfusion
- trauma
- intensive use of muscles
- burns
- intraarterial drugs
- cold
- surgery
- snakebites
- increased capillary pressure
- venous obstruction
- diminished serum osmolarilty
- nephrotic syndrome
- infiltrated infusions
- muscle hypertrophy
- popliteal cysts
Externally applied pressure:
- tight casts, dressings
- air splints
- lying on limb
The relative frequency of these different etiologies may vary
markedly from one geographical location to another. For example, in our
series from the University of Washington affiliated hospitals, l3
extremity trauma was the etiology in 24 of 44 cases. By contrast, in
the series from the University of California in San Diego, limb
compression in association with drug overdose accounted for 5 of 11
cases, l4 an etiology not seen in our series.
Whereas the mechanism by which most of the etiologies produce
increased tissue pressure is apparent, postischemic swelling deserves
some additional discussion. Like other tissues, capillary endothelium
is damaged by prolonged ischemia. This damage is reflected by an
increase in capillary permeability. If the circulation is restored
through ischemically damaged capillaries, the increased capillary
permeability results in extravasation of fluid with an increase in
extracellular volume. Cell volume may also be increased because
ischemia may deprive cells of their normal membrane integrity and ionic
pump functions. This postischemic swelling has been demonstrated by two
laboratory investigations. Fuhrman and Crismon 83 measured the water
content of rabbit muscle two hours after different periods of
tourniquet ischemia. They found that three hours of ischemia gave rise
to postischemic swelling of 30 to 60%. Whitesides et al 11 measured
tissue pressures in the compartments of dog hindlimbs after a period of
tourniquet ischemia. The postischemic increment in pressure was higher
the longer the tourniquet had been applied. Whereas only a few of the
animals with four hours of ischemia showed a significant increase in
tissue pressure, most of the six-hour and all of the eight-hour animals
showed significant pressure increases after the release of the
tourniquet.
Compartmental syndromes resulting from postischemic swelling can
present a diagnostic challenge. Because the tissue is injured by the
initial period of ischemia, neuromuscular function may already be
abnormal. Thus, the detection of additional deficits from a
superimposed compartmental syndrome requires very close observation of
the patient's nerve and muscle function. Surgery for Compartmental Syndromes at the University of Washington If you are interested in making an appointment to discuss this procedure, you can request an appointment using our online referrals website. To request a referral online, please click here. You can also call 206-598-BONE (2663) to make an appointment.
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