Surgical Demographics of Acute Hand Compartment Syndrome

Hand (N Y). 2023 Oct;18(7):1177-1182. doi: 10.1177/15589447221084012. Epub 2022 Mar 21.

Abstract

Background: We aimed to describe the demographic, injury-related, and treatment-related characteristics of patients who undergo fasciotomies for acute hand compartment syndrome.

Methods: A cohort of 53 adult patients with acute hand compartment syndrome treated with fasciotomy at 2 tertiary care referral centers over a 10-year time period from January 1, 2006, to June 30, 2015, were retrospectively identified. We reviewed the electronic medical record for patient-related variables (eg, age, sex, smoking status, diabetes mellitus), injury-related variables (eg, mechanism of injury, presence of fractures), and treatment-related variables (eg, compartments released, number of operations, use of split-thickness skin grafts, and time from injury to surgery).

Results: The mean age of our cohort was 45 years, and 33 patients (62%) were men. The mechanism of injury varied widely, but the most common causative mechanisms were crush injury (25%), prolonged decubitus (17%), and infection (11%). Associated hand fractures were present in 15 (28%) patients. The surgically released compartments varied; the dorsal interosseous compartments (83%), thenar compartment (75%), and hypothenar compartment (74%) were most frequently released, while the adductor pollicis compartment (43%) and Guyon canal (28%) were least frequently released.

Conclusions: The demographics of acute hand compartment syndrome have evolved in the last 25 years compared with the prior literature, partly as a result of the opioid epidemic leading to a rise in "found down" compartment syndrome. Treating providers should recognize crush injury, prolonged decubitus, and infection as the most common causes of acute hand compartment syndrome.

Keywords: Guyon canal; acute compartment syndrome; carpal tunnel; crush injury; found down; hand; trauma.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Compartment Syndromes* / epidemiology
  • Compartment Syndromes* / etiology
  • Compartment Syndromes* / surgery
  • Crush Injuries*
  • Demography
  • Female
  • Fractures, Bone* / complications
  • Hand / surgery
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Retrospective Studies