Threatening Inferior Limb Ischemia: When to Consider Fasciotomy and What Principles to Apply?
Inferior limb compartmental syndrome (CS) gathers a constellation of symptoms that traditionally refers to pathologically increased intramuscular and surrounding tissue pressure generally contained in nonexpansile leg spaces. It associates oftentimes reperfusion or traumatic injury. Intrinsic rigidity of these leg and foot closed compartments may enhance critical pressure risings with deleterious effects on specific vascular and nervous supply, with two main presentations: acute versus chronic display. For these situations, early fasciotomy plays the major role of releasing specific compartment hypertension and prevents deleterious tissue necrosis. Intervention is effective only if required upon precise indications (measured tissue pressure within 20 to 30 mm Hg of systemic diastolic pressure) and performed correctly in a timely fashioned approach. Any failure or delay in recognizing CS inevitably leads to adverse outcomes and jeopardy for secondary limb loss. When judiciously applied during or soon after limb-salvage revascularization technically successful fasciotomy may represent a major contributor in limb preservation. It accounts for a well-defined therapeutic proceeding available for any conscientious and well-briefed interventionist.