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Rarely Seen Compartment Syndrome of the Shoulder and Back: Diagnosis and Management.

Jamesa FabienCiara BurgessDouglas TaylorRaven HillAndreya AntoineSamantha WooleryArchibald Agyekum-YamoahCourtney H MeyerStacy DoughertyJonathan NguyenRandi SmithJason SciarrettaS Rob ToddChristine A Castater
Published in: The American surgeon (2024)
Compartment syndrome (CS) is a well-known surgical emergency with high morbidity including potential long-term disability and limb loss. The most important factor determining the degree of morbidity with CS is time to treatment; therefore, early diagnosis and surgery are vital. We present a patient who fell off his bicycle and sustained cervical spine fractures causing near complete quadriplegia. He was found by the road over 12 hours later, so his creatine phosphokinase (CPK) was trended and serial examinations were performed. We identified tight deltoid, trapezius, and latissimus compartments and brought him to the operating room for fasciotomies. Although lab values and compartment pressures can be helpful, they should not guide treatment. It is important to consider atypical sites for CS and complete a head to toe physical examination. Patients should proceed to the operating room if clinical suspicion exists for CS because of the morbidity associated with a missed diagnosis.
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