â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Acute Compartment Syndrome is a limb- and life-threatening orthopedic emergency characterized by elevated tissue pressure within a closed osteofibrous facial compartment.
â– PRESSURE AND PERFUSION MECHANISMS:
1. Fascial Rigidity: Fascia creates rigid, unyielding compartments containing muscle beds, nerves, and blood vessels.
2. Primary Insults: Triggered by trauma (e.g., crush injuries, supracondylar humeral fractures, or closed tibial shaft fractures) causing tissue swelling or localized hematomas.
3. Venous Occlusion: Rising pressure exceeds capillary perfusion pressure, compressing thin-walled venules and blocking venous outflow.
4. Ischemic Loop: Obstructed drainage raises pressure further, compressing small arterioles and starving muscle fibers and sensory axons of oxygen, leading to necrosis.
â– EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PROFILE & PREVALENCE METRICS:
Global burden mapping indicates significant geographic, ethnic, and temporal patterns. Incidence statistics reveal correlation with environmental lifestyle stressors, socio-economic vectors, and genetic founder effects.
â– ACUTE TOXICOLOGICAL PROFILE:
High cumulative chemical exposure or accidental overdose triggers systemic receptor overload, cellular injury, and metabolic acidosis.
[HY-BOARD-1175]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Compartment syndrome is diagnosed by the 6 Ps: Pain out of proportion to exam findings (most sensitive early sign), Paresthesia (sensory nerve compression), Pallor, Paralysis, Pulselessness (late, limb-loss sign), and Poikilothermia. Treat immediately with emergency surgical fasciotomy to prevent permanent Volkmann's contracture. Utilize standardized screening questionnaires across highly endemic populations to detect early subclinical cases. Immediate administration of physiological charcoal or specific receptor antagonists is lifesaving.