Two Urgency Categories, Same Outcome: No Difference After “Therapeutic” vs. “Prophylactic” Fasciotomy

Author:

Moran Benjamin J.1,Quintana Megan T.2,Michael Scalea Thomas3,DuBose Joseph3,Feliciano David V.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. George Washington University Hospital, Washington, DC, USA

3. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

Objectives Fasciotomy to treat or prevent compartment syndromes in patients with truncal or peripheral arterial injuries is a valuable adjunct. The objective of this study was to document the current incidence, indications, and outcomes of below knee fasciotomy in patients with femoropopliteal arterial injuries. Methods The PROspective Observational Vascular Injury Treatment registry of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma was utilized to identify patients undergoing two-incision four-compartment fasciotomy of the leg after repair of a femoropopliteal arterial injury. Outcomes after therapeutic versus prophylactic (surgeon label) fasciotomy were compared as was the technique of closure, that is, primary skin closure or application of a split-thickness skin graft (STSG). Results From 2013 to 2018, fasciotomy was performed in 158 patients overall, including 95.6% (151/158) at the initial operation. In the group of 139 patients who survived to discharge, fasciotomies were labeled as therapeutic in 58.3% (81/139) and prophylactic in 41.7% (58/139). There were no significant differences between the therapeutic and prophylactic groups in amputation rates (14.8% vs. 8.6%, P = .919). Primary skin closure was achieved at a median of 5.0 days vs. 11.0 days for STSG ( P = .001). Conclusions Over 55% of patients undergoing repair of an injury to a femoral or popliteal artery have a fasciotomy performed at the same operation. A “therapeutic” indication for fasciotomy continues to be more common than “prophylactic,” while outcomes are identical in both groups.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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