Rm. Biedert et B. Marti, INTRACOMPARTMENTAL PRESSURE BEFORE AND AFTER FASCIOTOMY IN RUNNERS WITH CHRONIC DEEP POSTERIOR COMPARTMENT SYNDROME, International journal of sports medicine, 18(5), 1997, pp. 381-386
Exercise induced pain in the posterior part of the leg is common among
runners; the underlying reason for these complaints may be very diffe
rent. The purpose of the present, controlled study was therefore 1. to
confirm a clinically diagnosed deep posterior compartment syndrome by
using intramuscular pressure measurements and 2. to evaluate the effe
ct of a surgical release on clinical signs and intracompartment pressu
re values. Fifteen symptomatic runners with the clinical suspicion of
a chronic deep posterior compartment syndrome and nine healthy recreat
ional runners as controls were investigated. Intramuscular pressure wa
s measured both at rest and up to two minutes post-exercise, using a p
ressure-monitor with a transducer. In symptomatic runners, the average
pressure was preoperatively 5.6 mmHg (95%-confidence-interval [CII: 3
.4-7.6) at rest, rising to 18.5 mmHg (CI: 15.4-21.8) post-exercise. Co
rresponding values in healthy control runners were 5.1 mmHg (CI: 1.9-8
.3) at rest, with a decrease induced by exercise to 2.8 mmHg (CI:-0.5-
6.1). After fasciotomy of the deep posterior compartment in all fiftee
n symptomatic runners, average pressure values fell to 2.2 mmHg (CI:1.
0-3.4) at rest, and were further reduced after (now pain-free) exercis
e to 1.6 mmHg (Cl:0.6-2.6). The decrease between pre-operative and pos
t-operative values was statistically highly significant (p<0.0001 for
values after running, p<0.005 for values at rest). In conclusion, intr
acompartment pressure measurement is a useful technique to confirm the
clinical diagnosis of deep posterior compartment syndrome prior to re
commending surgery. Hereby, an exercise-induced rise in pressure of at
least 10 mmHg, corresponding to a two-to threefold increase of values
measured at rest, may be a more important diagnostic criterion than a
bsolute levels of pressure measured before or after running.