## Correct Answer: B. Immediate fasciotomy This patient has **acute compartment syndrome (ACS)** of the anterior tibial compartment, a surgical emergency. The classic triad of pain out of proportion to injury, pain with passive stretch (dorsiflexion), and sensory loss (first dorsal webspace = deep peroneal nerve territory) are pathognomonic. Although pulses remain present (a critical discriminator—ACS occurs *before* vascular compromise), the combination of severe pain unresponsive to analgesics, progressive neurological deficit (sensory loss), and the mechanism (closed tibia fracture with soft-tissue trauma) mandates **immediate fasciotomy**. Compartment syndrome develops within 6–12 hours post-injury due to edema and hemorrhage within the fascial envelope, raising intracompartmental pressure above capillary perfusion pressure. Waiting for objective pressure measurements or further deterioration risks irreversible muscle necrosis, permanent nerve damage, and contracture. In Indian trauma centers (AIIMS, major government hospitals), fasciotomy is the standard of care when clinical suspicion is high—it is a low-threshold, life-limb-saving procedure. Delaying fasciotomy for observation or conservative measures results in rhabdomyolysis, acute kidney injury, and permanent disability. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Apply cast and follow up** — This is wrong because casting a limb with evolving compartment syndrome will worsen the condition by further restricting blood flow and increasing intracompartmental pressure. The patient already has neurological signs (sensory loss) and severe pain—casting delays definitive treatment and guarantees muscle necrosis. This is a common NBE trap: students may think immobilization helps fracture management, but in ACS it is contraindicated. **C. Elevate the limb and observe** — This is wrong because elevation reduces perfusion pressure in a compartment already at critical pressure, accelerating ischemia. Observation without fasciotomy in the presence of pain out of proportion, passive stretch pain, and neurological deficit is malpractice-level delay. The 6-hour window is critical; waiting further guarantees irreversible damage. NBE may include this to test whether students confuse ACS management with simple swelling. **D. Administer opioid analgesics and continue observation** — This is wrong because pain in compartment syndrome is a **warning sign of tissue ischemia**, not merely a symptom to mask. Opioids will obscure the clinical picture and delay recognition of deterioration. The patient's pain is already unresponsive to analgesics—a red flag for ACS. Observation without fasciotomy is fatal to the limb. This trap exploits the reflex to 'treat pain,' but in ACS, pain is the alarm bell. ## High-Yield Facts - **Pain out of proportion to injury** is the earliest and most sensitive sign of compartment syndrome; it precedes vascular compromise and neurological loss. - **Pulses remain present in ACS** until late stages—absence of pulses indicates advanced ischemia and is NOT required for diagnosis; this is the key discriminator that separates ACS from arterial injury. - **Deep peroneal nerve (anterior compartment)** innervates the first dorsal webspace; sensory loss there localizes the syndrome to the anterior compartment. - **Fasciotomy must be performed within 6–8 hours** of symptom onset to prevent irreversible muscle necrosis; delay beyond 12 hours results in permanent contracture and disability. - **Compartment pressure >30 mmHg** (or within 30 mmHg of diastolic BP) is diagnostic, but **clinical suspicion alone warrants fasciotomy** in Indian trauma settings where pressure monitoring may not be immediately available. - **Passive stretch pain** (pain with dorsiflexion in anterior compartment syndrome) is the second most specific clinical sign and indicates muscle ischemia. ## Mnemonics ****5 P's of Compartment Syndrome (Late Signs)**** Pain (out of proportion), Pressure (tense compartment), Paresthesia, Pallor, Pulselessness. Remember: Pain is FIRST and MOST SENSITIVE; the other P's come late. By the time you see pulselessness, irreversible damage has occurred. ****STOP ACS (Memory Hook)**** **S**evere pain out of proportion, **T**ense compartment, **O**ut of proportion to injury, **P**assive stretch pain → **A**cute **C**ompartment **S**yndrome → Fasciotomy NOW. Use this when you see the triad: pain + passive stretch pain + neurological loss. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "present pulses" with "no need for fasciotomy" to trap students who think ACS requires absent pulses. The key discriminator is that **pulses remain present in early-to-mid ACS**; their absence is a late, ominous sign indicating irreversible ischemia. Students must recognize that pain out of proportion + passive stretch pain + neurological loss = fasciotomy, regardless of pulse status. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian trauma centers, compartment syndrome is often missed because students wait for "objective" signs (pressure measurement, absent pulses) or assume pain is just from the fracture. The rule is simple: **if pain is out of proportion and worsens with passive stretch, fasciotomy is indicated**—do not delay for imaging, pressure monitors, or further observation. Early fasciotomy in a patient without ACS causes minimal harm; late fasciotomy in a patient with ACS causes permanent disability. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 32 (Compartment Syndrome); Harrison Ch. 330 (Trauma); Robbins Ch. 1 (Acute Inflammation and Ischemia)_
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