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A CADAVER STUDY
241
Citations
34
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
Gross AnatomyAxial SkeletonApplied AnatomyForensic MedicineCadaver StudyLower Limb TraumaTopographical AnatomyThanatologyCompartment SyndromeSurgeryIntermediate SeptumAnatomyMusculoskeletal SurgeryMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryPlastic SurgeryDeath InvestigationMedial Septum
J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 2008;90-B:1114-18. Received 31 January 2008; Accepted after revision 14 April 2008 Compartment syndrome of the foot requires urgent surgical treatment. Currently, there is still no agreement on the number and location of the myofascial compartments of the foot. The aim of this cadaver study was to provide an anatomical basis for surgical decompression in the event of compartment syndrome. We found that there were three tough vertical fascial septae that extended from the hindfoot to the midfoot on the plantar aspect of the foot. These septae separated the posterior half of the foot into three compartments. The medial compartment containing the abductor hallucis was surrounded medially by skin and subcutaneous fat and laterally by the medial septum. The intermediate compartment, containing the flexor digitorum brevis and the quadratus plantae more deeply, was surrounded by the medial septum medially, the intermediate septum laterally and the main plantar aponeurosis on its plantar aspect. The lateral compartment containing the abductor digiti minimi was surrounded medially by the intermediate septum, laterally by the lateral septum and on its plantar aspect by the lateral band of the main plantar aponeurosis. No distinct myofascial compartments exist in the forefoot. Based on our findings, in theory, fasciotomy of the hindfoot compartments through a modified medial incision would be sufficient to decompress the foot.
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