Section of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA 02119-2393 , United States.
Injury. 2012 Sep;43(9):1486-91. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2011.06.006. Epub 2011 Jun 29.
Lower extremity (LE) arterial trauma and its treatment may lead to extremity compartment syndrome (ECS). In that setting, the decision to perform fasciotomies is multifactoral and is not well delineated. We evaluated the outcomes of patients with surgically treated LE arterial injury who underwent early or delayed fasciotomies.
The National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) was retrospectively reviewed for patients who had LE arterial trauma and underwent both open vascular repair and fasciotomies. Exclusion criteria were additional non-LE vascular trauma, head or spinal cord injuries, crush injuries, burn injuries, and declaration of death on arrival. Patients were divided into those who had fasciotomies performed within 8h (early group) or >8h after open vascular repair (late group). Comparative analyses of demographics, injury characteristics, complications, and outcomes were performed.
Of the 1469 patient admissions with lower extremity arterial trauma that met inclusion criteria there were 612 patients (41.7%) who underwent fasciotomies. There were 543 and 69 patients in the early and late fasciotomy groups, respectively. There was no significant difference in age, injury severity, mechanism of injury, associated injuries, and type of vascular repair between the groups. A higher rate of iliac artery injury was observed in the late fasciotomy group (23.2% vs. 5.9%, P<.001). Patients in the early fasciotomy group had lower amputation rate (8.5% vs. 24.6%, P<.001), lower infection rate (6.6% vs. 14.5%, P = .028) and shorter total hospital stay (18.5 ± 20.7 days vs. 24.2 ± 14.7 days, P = .007) than those in the late fasciotomy group. On multivariable analysis, early fasciotomy was associated with a 4-fold lower risk of amputation (Odds Ratio 0.26, 95% CI 0.14-0.50, P<.0001) and 23% shorter hospital LOS (Means Ratio 0.77, 95% CI 0.64-0.94, P = .01).
Early fasciotomy is associated with improved outcomes in patients with lower extremity vascular trauma treated with surgical intervention. Our findings suggest that appropriate implementation of early fasciotomy may reduce amputation rates in extremity arterial injury.
下肢(LE)动脉创伤及其治疗可能导致肢体间隔综合征(ECS)。在这种情况下,进行筋膜切开术的决定是多因素的,目前还没有明确的界定。我们评估了接受手术治疗的 LE 动脉损伤患者的结局,这些患者接受了早期或延迟筋膜切开术。
回顾性分析了国家创伤数据库(NTDB)中接受 LE 动脉创伤和开放性血管修复及筋膜切开术的患者。排除标准为其他非 LE 血管创伤、头部或脊髓损伤、挤压伤、烧伤和到达时宣布死亡。患者分为筋膜切开术在血管修复后 8 小时内(早期组)或>8 小时后(晚期组)进行。对人口统计学、损伤特征、并发症和结局进行了比较分析。
在符合纳入标准的 1469 例下肢动脉创伤患者中,有 612 例(41.7%)接受了筋膜切开术。早期筋膜切开组和晚期筋膜切开组分别有 543 例和 69 例患者。两组之间在年龄、损伤严重程度、损伤机制、合并伤和血管修复类型方面无显著差异。晚期筋膜切开组髂动脉损伤发生率较高(23.2%比 5.9%,P<.001)。早期筋膜切开组截肢率较低(8.5%比 24.6%,P<.001),感染率较低(6.6%比 14.5%,P =.028),总住院时间较短(18.5±20.7 天比 24.2±14.7 天,P =.007)。多变量分析显示,早期筋膜切开与截肢风险降低 4 倍相关(优势比 0.26,95%CI 0.14-0.50,P<.0001),住院 LOS 缩短 23%(均值比 0.77,95%CI 0.64-0.94,P =.01)。
下肢血管创伤患者接受手术治疗后,早期筋膜切开术与改善结局相关。我们的研究结果表明,适当实施早期筋膜切开术可能会降低肢体动脉损伤的截肢率。