The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 68, Issue 6 820-828, Copyright © 1986 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
A comparative study of the tolerance of skeletal muscle to ischemia. Tourniquet application compared with acute compartment syndrome
RB Heppenstall, R Scott, A Sapega, YS Park and B Chance
In this study, the tolerance of skeletal muscle to tourniquet application
(ischemia) and to acute compartment syndrome (ischemia and pressure) was
compared. In five animals, the cuff of a pneumatic tourniquet was inflated
to 350 millimeters of mercury at the level of the thigh for three hours. In
five other animals, an acute experimental compartment syndrome was created
in one anterolateral compartment by autologous plasma infusion. The
compartment pressure (measured by wick catheter) was maintained at a level
equal to the mean arterial pressure for three hours. At three hours,
reperfusion was established in both groups, either by tourniquet release or
by decompressive fasciotomy and epimysiotomy. During both the ischemic
period and a two-hour recovery period immediately thereafter, the mean
intracellular pH and high-energy phosphate profile (levels of adenosine
triphosphate and phosphocreatine) of the muscles of the anterolateral
compartment were monitored non-invasively by phosphorus nuclear
magnetic-resonance spectroscopy. Muscle biopsies were done the following
day to take specimens for electron microscopic analysis of ultrastructural
cellular degeneration. During ischemia, the cellular levels of
phosphocreatine decreased at an identical rate in both groups. In contrast,
the levels of adenosine triphosphate diminished rapidly in the animals with
the compartment syndrome, but remained unchanged in the tourniquet group.
Ischemic muscle acidosis was more severe in dogs with the compartment
syndrome. In the tourniquet group, the phosphocreatine, adenosine
triphosphate, and pH were all normal within fifteen minutes after release
of the tourniquet, but these values remained depressed even two hours after
fasciotomy in the group with compartment syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT
250 WORDS)