A 30-year-old male is brought to the emergency department by paramedics after a motorcycle accident. He is complaining of severe pain in his right leg. His only injury is an obvious deformity of the right leg below the knee. Imaging reveals a fracture of the tibia and fibula. He is taken to the operating room for an open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF). Approximately eight hours after surgery, the patient complains of severe pain in his right leg. On physical examination, the right leg appears to be tensely swollen. He feels tenderness upon palpation, especially just lateral to his tibia. When his ankle is passively dorsiflexed, he grimaces in pain. His foot appears pink and well perfused. Pulses in the dorsalis pedis and posterior tibial are 2+. Doppler interrogation demonstrates biphasic signals in both arteries. Sensory exam of the right foot is intact except for numbness in the first web space.
CITATION STYLE
Nguyen, A., Grigorian, A., & de Virgilio, C. (2015). Severe right leg pain after tibia fracture. In Surgery: A Case Based Clinical Review (pp. 473–478). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-1726-6_47
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