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– ETIOLOGICAL PROFILE & RISK FACTORS:
Major etiological drivers include genetic predispositions (autosomal patterns and chromosomal translocations) and environmental triggers like toxic chemical exposure, mechanical stress, or chronic viral infections.
â– SECONDARY PREVENTION METRICS:
Implementing long-term dietary adaptations, physical therapy, and compliance aids reduces the rate of recurring acute crises by more than half.
[HY-BOARD-1223]
🌟 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. Assess family history and genetic screens to identify high-risk patients before symptoms present. Patient education regarding warning signs and therapy adherence is the cornerstone of secondary prevention.