Abstract
Since the recognition of chronic exertional compartment syndrome (CECS) of the leg as a cause of exercise-induced leg pain was made in the 1950s, there has been no universally accepted diagnostic pressure. A 1997 review found 16 papers from 1962 to 1990, which have differing diagnostic criteria. The threshold pressure used at DMRC Headley Court is based on the work of Allen and Barnes from 1986, where in a patient with a suitable history, a dynamic pressure in the exercising muscle compartment above 50 mmHg is diagnostic.
We present the data gathered at DMRC Headley Court during the first year of the new protocol on dynamic pressure testing, from May 2007. The new exercise protocol involved exercising patients using a representative military task: the combat fitness test (CFT) using a 15 kg Bergen on a treadmill, set at 6.5 km/h with zero incline. During this period, we performed 151 intra-compartmental pressure studies in 76 patients. 120 were successful in 68 patients, with 31 technical failures. Patients complained of exercise-induced leg pain on performing the CFT and pointed to the muscles in either the anterior or deep posterior muscle compartments and these were exclusively tested with invasive studies. No patients complained of symptoms in the lateral or superficial posterior compartments and therefore neither was tested. The majority were performed in the anterior leg compartment (110 successful), with a few (9 successful) in the deep posterior compartment, and there was only one complication with a posterior tibial artery puncture.
The mean age of patient was 28.9 years (SD 6.7). In 119 compartment studies, the mean pressure was 97.8 mmHg (SD 31.7). This data is normally distributed (Shapiro Wilk test, W=0.98 p=0.125).
In summary, we present the data using the CFT as the exercise protocol in patients who give a history compatible with CECS and have symptoms of leg pain during exercise. This data has a mean of approximately 100 mmHg, which is double that of the diagnostic criteria of Allen and Barnes, who used running as the exercise protocol. The presence of a weighted bergen as well as the stride and gait pattern used during the loaded march may be contributory factors in explaining why the pressures are higher compared to other forms of exercise. Further work is ongoing with determining the intracom-partmental muscle pressure in normal subjects with no history of exertional leg pain performing the CFT.
The abstracts were prepared by Major N. J. Ward ramc. Correspondence should be addressed to him at nickjward72@hotmail.com