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Dull severe pain in lower extremity

Dull severe pain in lower extremity. Exercise Induced Compartment syndrome. Exertional Compartment Syndrome. Compartment syndrome. Compression of nerves, blood vessles and muscle inside a closed space Leads to tissue death from lack of oxygenation Involves the forearm and lower leg

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Dull severe pain in lower extremity

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  1. Dull severe pain in lower extremity

  2. Exercise Induced Compartment syndrome Exertional Compartment Syndrome

  3. Compartment syndrome • Compression of nerves, blood vessles and muscle inside a closed space • Leads to tissue death from lack of oxygenation • Involves the forearm and lower leg • Divided into acute, subacute and chronic

  4. Chronic type • Repetitive use of muscles such as a cyclists

  5. What are the 5 P’s?

  6. 5 or 6 P’s • Pain • Paresthesia • Pallor • Paralysis pulselessness • Polar/poikilthermia (failure to thermoregulate)

  7. Symptoms • Pain with activity and relieved with rest • Tingling or numbness in the leg or foot due to the lack of blood flow to the nerves • Area over the muscles feel very tight

  8. Pain • Reported early • Severe, deep constant and poorly localize and out od proportion wit the injury • Pain is made worse by stretching the muscle group within the compartment • Pain is not relieved by morphine

  9. Causes • Tibial and forearm fractures • Hemorrhage • Drug injections • Casts • Crush injuries • Burns

  10. DDX • Uncommon • Stress syndrome - shin splints • Stress fracture

  11. Causes • Pressure builds up in muscle • Enclose in a tight fascia • Blood flow increases in muscles and size of muscles increases • Fascia becomes too tight • Constricts the muscle during activity

  12. As muscle expands and becomes contracted by the fascia, blood flow to the muscle is interrupted and ischemia occurs • Like a heart attack pain develops

  13. Name the lower leg compartments?

  14. Lower leg Compartments • Anterior • Lateral • Deep posterior • Superficial posterior

  15. Anterior Compartment syndrome • Anterior compartment is most often involved • Pain with activity completely subsides after 15 minutes of rest • Exam: weakness of toe extension and pain on passive toe flexion • Diminished sensation in the first web space

  16. Posterior Compartment SyndromeTibialis Posterior Muscle compartment • Weakness of toe flexion and ankle inversion • Pain on passive toe extension • Diminished sensation over the sole of the foot

  17. Lateral Compartment syndrome • Signs and syndromes are similar to anterior tibial compartment syndrome but the peroneus longus and brevis muscles are involved • Pain is usually absent anteriorly but the muscles of the anterior compartment are paralyzed from ischemia of the deep peroneal nerve as it passes thru

  18. Diagnoses • Measure the pressure within the muscle • Pressure is made at rest • Patient does some activity until there is pain • Usually the pain changes is small but with exercise induce compartmental syndrome symptoms are present after exercise

  19. Pressures • Normal pressures at rest are between 0 and 4 mm Hg (some say <11 mm is normal) • Post-exercise reading of greater than 35 mm Hg is highly indicative of compartment syndrome and great than 40 mmHg is diagnostic

  20. Treatment • Rest • Surgery is needed – fasciotomy • Major risk is cutting the nerve

  21. Technique • SubQfasciotomy • 2 vertical incisions (one distal and one proximal) • If a fascia hernia is present incorporate the fascia defect into the fasciotomy incision

  22. Post-op • AROM is not restricted postoperatively • Once incisions are healed patient can begin progressive activities as tolerated • Return to full activities in 3 to 4 weeks

  23. Complications • Necrosis of tissue in that compartment • Rhabdomyolysis and kidney failure • Death

  24. Endoscopic Compartment release • Safe technique to use for chronic

  25. Abdominal Compartment syndrome

  26. How do you measure intra-abdominal pressure?

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