Twenty-one compartment syndromes of the thigh in seventeen patients were
identified for retrospective review. Ten of the compartment syndromes were
associated with an ipsilateral femoral fracture; five of these femoral
fractures were open. In five patients, the syndrome followed femoral
intramedullary stabilization. The remaining eleven syndromes followed blunt
trauma to the thigh, prolonged compression by body weight, or vascular
injury. The patients who were awake and alert at the time of the
examination complained of intense pain in the thigh, and they had
neuromuscular deficits. For the patients who could not cooperate with a
subjective physical examination because they were under general anesthesia
or because of associated injuries, the measurement of compartment pressure
assumed a more important diagnostic role. All of the patients had tense
swelling of the involved thigh. The predisposing risk factors for the
development of compartment syndromes of the thigh, which are common in the
multiply injured population, include: systemic hypotension, a history of
external compression of the thigh, the use of military antishock trousers,
coagulopathy, vascular injury, and trauma to the thigh, with or without a
fracture of the femur. In approximately one-half of these patients, a crush
syndrome developed, with myoglobinuria, renal failure, and collapse of
multiple organ systems. Eight patients (47 per cent) died as a result of
multiple injuries. Of the nine patients (ten compartment syndromes) who
survived, infection developed at the site of the fasciotomy in six.
Follow-up examination revealed marked morbidity, including sensory deficit
and motor weakness of the lower extremity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250
WORDS)