Factors Predicting Lower Leg Chronic Exertional Compartment Syndrome in a Large Population

Author:

de Bruijn Johan1,van Zantvoort Aniek1,van Klaveren David2,Winkes Michiel1,van der Cruijsen-Raaijmakers Marike3,Hoogeveen Adwin3,Teijink Joep45,Scheltinga Marc1

Affiliation:

1. Máxima Medical Center, Surgery, Veldhoven, the Netherlands

2. Erasmus MC, Public health, Rotterdam, the Netherlands

3. Máxima Medical Center, Sports Medicine, Veldhoven, the Netherlands

4. Catharina Hospital, Surgery, Eindhoven, the Netherlands

5. Maastricht University, CAPHRI research school, department of epidemiology, Maastricht, the Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractKnowledge about lower leg chronic exertional compartment syndrome (CECS) is largely obtained from highly selected populations. Patient characteristics may therefore not be appropriate for the general population. Our purpose was to describe a heterogeneous population of individuals suspected of lower leg CECS and to identify predictors of CECS. Charts of individuals who were analyzed for exercise-induced lower leg pain in a referral center between 2001 and 2013 were retrospectively studied. Patients were included if history and physical examination were suggestive of CECS and if they had undergone a dynamic intracompartmental pressure measurement. Six hundred ninety-eight of 1411 individuals were diagnosed with CECS in one or more of three lower leg muscle compartments (anterior tibial, deep flexor, lateral). Prevalence of CECS peaked around the age of 20–25 years and decreased thereafter, although a plateau around 50 years was found. Age, gender, bilateral symptoms, previous lower leg pathology, sports (running and skating) and tender muscle compartments were identified as independent predictors of lower leg CECS. The proposed predictive model has moderate discriminative ability (AUC 0.66) and good calibration over the complete range of predicted probabilities. The predictive model, displayed as a nomogram, may aid in selecting individuals requiring an invasive dynamic intracompartmental muscle pressure measurement.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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