This pressure can decrease blood flow, which prevents nourishment and oxygen from reaching nerve and muscle cells.Compartment syndrome can be either acute or chronic.
Acute compartment syndrome is a medical emergency. It is usually caused by a severe injury. Without treatment, it can lead to permanent muscle damage.
Chronic compartment syndrome, also known as exertional compartment syndrome, is usually not a medical emergency. It is most often caused by athletic exertion.
Anatomy
The area between the knee and ankle has four major muscle compartments: anterior, lateral, superficial posterior, deep posterior.
Compartments are groupings of muscles, nerves, and blood vessels in your arms and legs. Covering these tissues is a tough membrane called a fascia. The role of the fascia is to keep the tissues in place, and, therefore, the fascia does not stretch or expand easily.
Description
Compartment syndrome develops when swelling or bleeding occurs within a compartment. Because the fascia does not stretch, this can cause increased pressure on the capillaries, nerves, and muscles in the compartment. Blood flow to muscle and nerve cells is disrupted. Without a steady supply of oxygen and nutrients, nerve and muscle cells can be damaged.
In acute compartment syndrome, unless the pressure is relieved quickly, permanent disability and tissue death may result. This does not usually happen in chronic (exertional) compartment syndrome.
Compartment syndrome most often occurs in the anterior (front) compartment of the lower leg (calf). It can also occur in other compartments in the leg, as well as in the arms, hands, feet, and buttocks.
Cause
Acute Compartment Syndrome:
Acute compartment syndrome
usually develops after a severe injury, such as a car accident or a
broken bone. Rarely, it develops after a relatively minor injury.
Conditions that may bring on acute compartment syndrome include:
A fracture.
A badly bruised muscle:
This type of injury can occur
when a motorcycle falls on the leg of the rider, or a football player is
hit in the leg with another player's helmet.
Reestablished blood flow after blocked circulation:
This may occur after a surgeon repairs a damaged blood vessel that has
been blocked for several hours.
A blood vessel can also be blocked
during sleep. Lying for too long in a position that blocks a blood
vessel, then moving or waking up can cause this condition. Most healthy
people will naturally move when blood flow to a limb is blocked during
sleep.
The development of compartment syndrome in this manner usually
occurs in people who are neurologically compromised. This can happen
after severe intoxication with alcohol or other drugs.
Crush injuries
Taking steroids is a possible factor in compartment syndrome.
Constricting bandages:
Casts and tight bandages may
lead to compartment syndrome. If symptoms of compartment syndrome
develop, remove or loosen any constricting bandages. If you have a cast,
contact your doctor immediately.
Chronic (Exertional) Compartment Syndrome
The pain and swelling of
chronic compartment syndrome is caused by exercise. Athletes who
participate in activities with repetitive motions, such as running,
biking, or swimming, are more likely to develop chronic compartment
syndrome. This is usually relieved by discontinuing the exercise, and is
usually not dangerous.
Acute Compartment Syndrome
Go to an emergency room
immediately if there is concern about acute compartment syndrome. This
is a medical emergency. Your doctor will measure the compartment
pressure to determine whether you have acute compartment syndrome.
Chronic (Exertional) Compartment Syndrome
To diagnose chronic
compartment syndrome, your doctor must rule out other conditions that
could also cause pain in the lower leg. For example, your doctor may
press on your tendons to make sure you do not have tendonitis. He or she
may order an X-ray to make sure your shinbone (tibia) does not have a
stress fracture.
To confirm chronic compartment syndrome, your doctor will measure the
pressures in your compartment before and after exercise. If pressures
remain high after exercise, you have chronic compartment syndrome.
Treatment
Acute Compartment Syndrome
Acute compartment syndrome is a surgical emergency. There is no effective nonsurgical treatment.Your doctor will make an incision and cut open the skin and fascia
covering the affected compartment. This procedure is called a
fasciotomy.Sometimes, the swelling can be severe enough that the skin incision cannot be closed immediately. The incision is surgically repaired when swelling subsides. Sometimes a skin graft is used.
Chronic (Exertional) Compartment Syndrome
Nonsurgical treatment:
Physical therapy, orthotics
(inserts for shoes), and anti-inflammatory medicines are sometimes
suggested.
They have had questionable results for relieving symptoms.
Your symptoms may subside if you avoid the activity that caused the
condition. Cross-training with low-impact activities may be an option. Some athletes have symptoms that are worse on certain surfaces (concrete vs. running track, or artficial turf vs. grass). Symptoms may be relieved by switching surfaces.
Surgical treatment:
If conservative measures fail, surgery may be an option. Similar to the surgery for acute compartment syndrome, the operation is designed to open the fascia so that there is more room for the muscles to swell.
Usually, the skin incision for chronic compartment syndrome is shorter than the incision for acut compartment syndrome. Also, this surgery is typically an elective procedure -- not an emergency.
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