Abstract

The Major Extremity Trauma and Rehabilitation Consortium and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons have developed the Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) for the Diagnosis and Management of Acute Compartment Syndrome (ACS). Evidence-based information, in conjunction with the clinical expertise of physicians, was used to develop the criteria to improve patient care, aid decision-making, and obtain the best possible outcomes while considering the subtleties and distinctions necessary in making clinical decisions. The AUC for the Diagnosis and Management of ACS were derived by identifying clinical indications typical of patients suspected of an ACS in clinical practice. These indications were most often parameters observable by the clinician, including symptoms or results of diagnostic tests. The 135 patient scenarios and five treatments were developed by the writing panel, a group of clinicians who are specialists in this AUC topic. Next, a separate, multidisciplinary, voting panel (made up of specialists and nonspecialists) rated the appropriateness of treatment of each patient scenario using a nine-point scale to designate a treatment as "appropriate" (median rating, seven to nine), "may be appropriate" (median rating, four to six), or "rarely appropriate" (median rating, one to three).

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