Medline ® Abstracts for References 62,95,96
of 'Acute compartment syndrome of the extremities'
62
TI
Acute peripheral ischaemia and compartment syndromes: a role for hyperbaric oxygenation.
AU
Wattel F, Mathieu D, Nevière R, Bocquillon N
SO
Anaesthesia. 1998;53 Suppl 2:63.
AD
PMID
95
TI
Delayed use of hyperbaric oxygen for treatment of a model anterior compartment syndrome.
AU
Strauss MB, Hargens AR, Gershuni DH, Hart GB, Akeson WH
SO
J Orthop Res. 1986;4(1):108.
This study examines the effect of delayed exposure to hyperbaric oxygen on muscle necrosis and edema development following compartment syndromes in the canine hindlimb. Compartment syndromes (100 mm Hg for 8 h) were generated in one anterolateral compartment of six anesthetized dogs. After a 2-h delay, three 1-h hyperbaric oxygen treatments (2 atm absolute pure oxygen) were given during the next 12 h. Two days later, technetium-99m stannous pyrophosphate (99mTc Sn-PYP) was injected intravenously; 3 h later, samples were obtained from the pressurized and contralateral control muscles, weighed for edema development, counted for 99mTC Sn-PYP uptake, and evaluated histologically. Hyperbaric oxygen treatments, even when delayed 2 h, reduced muscle necrosis and intramuscular edema to negligible levels (p less than 0.05) compared with untreated animals. In addition, muscle morphology remained essentially normal in all hyperbaric oxygen-treated animals. We conclude that even if hyperbaric oxygen treatments are delayed 2 h, edema and muscle necrosis are reduced significantly in a model compartment syndrome.
AD
PMID
96
TI
Hyperbaric-oxygen therapy.
AU
Tibbles PM, Edelsberg JS
SO
N Engl J Med. 1996;334(25):1642.
AD
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester 01655, USA.
PMID
