Catastrophic Crush Injury & Compartment Syndrome Lawsuits
When a limb is trapped, compressed, or crushed, damage can snowball fast. Tissue swelling can build dangerous pressure inside the muscles – acute compartment syndrome – cutting off blood flow and nerve function. Untreated, it leads to permanent disability or amputation; once diagnosed, emergent fasciotomy is typically required. Our job is to move quickly: secure evidence, notify the right parties, and protect your claim while you focus on medical care.
We hold negligent parties accountable – whether the crush injury came from a truck crash, a machine entrapment, a trench collapse, a structural failure, or medical negligence (missed/delayed diagnosis of compartment syndrome). From day one, we assemble the right team for catastrophic cases: accident reconstructionists, human-factors and OSHA experts, orthopedic/vascular and nephrology experts, life-care planners, and vocational/economic specialists.


How Much Is Your Case Worth?
Our Results
McEldrew Purtell has a proven track record of maximizing recovery for clients with catastrophic injuries.
Results may vary depending on your particular facts and legal circumstances.
Ways We Can Help
Below are common scenarios that cause crush injuries or lead to compartment syndrome. For each, we develop the evidence and pursue every responsible party to seek full compensation.
Commercial Vehicle & Trucking Crashes
High-energy impacts (underride/override, cargo shift) create severe crush and vascular injuries that can trigger compartment syndrome or necessitate later surgical intervention. Liable parties may include: driver, motor carrier (hiring/training/HOS), shipper/broker (negligent selection/load securement), maintenance contractors, and parts manufacturers.
Workplace & Industrial Machine Entrapments
Unguarded presses, conveyors, augers, balers, and unexpected start-ups (lockout/tagout failures) can trap limbs and cause ischemic damage. Liable parties may include: machine/component manufacturers, installers, maintenance vendors, site GC/subs, premises owners, and safety contractors (third-party claims in addition to workers’ comp).
Construction Site & Trench/Excavation Collapses
Cave-ins and shoring failures cause prolonged compression that risks crush syndrome (rhabdomyolysis, hyperkalemia, kidney injury) and acute compartment syndrome.
Liable parties may include: GC, excavation subcontractor, safety consultant, property owner, and equipment manufacturers.
Structural Failures & Building/Scaffold Collapses
Structural or scaffold failures can pin victims beneath debris, causing systemic complications from muscle breakdown. Liable parties may include: property owners, engineers/architects, erectors, maintenance contractors, and product manufacturers.
Forklift, Warehouse & Racking Incidents
Tip-overs, pinch points, and falling pallets commonly crush extremities. Liable parties may include: employer’s third-party contractors, equipment manufacturers, and premises owners.
Railroad & Yard Coupling Injuries (FELA)
Coupler “slack action,” roll-away cars, and yard equipment can crush extremities; timely medical response to evolving compartment syndrome is critical.
Liable parties may include: railroad entities and equipment makers.
Defective Products & Tools
Design/guarding defects, unexpected energization, or inadequate warnings can cause entrapment and crush injuries. Liable parties may include: manufacturers, component suppliers, distributors, retailers, and installers (design/manufacturing defect or failure-to-warn theories).
Fire, Explosions & Building Services Failures
Blast forces, collapsing structures, and heavy debris can create crush injuries requiring fasciotomy or leading to amputation. Liable parties may include: utilities, appliance/battery manufacturers, landlords, and contractors.
Medical Negligence / Delayed Diagnosis
Acute compartment syndrome is a clinical emergency; delays in diagnosis or decompression can cause permanent nerve/muscle death and loss of limb. Liable parties may include: hospitals, EDs, orthopedics/vascular, nursing/wound-care, and home-health providers.
Don’t Just Take Our Word For It
Hear From Our Clients
At McEldrew Purtell, results matter and so does the way we achieve them. While our case outcomes reflect our tenacity in court and at the negotiation table, it’s the voices of our clients that truly capture who we are and why we do this work.
We represent people at the worst moments of their lives: after catastrophic injuries, workplace tragedies, and preventable losses. Through every case, we aim to deliver not just compensation but clarity, confidence, and care.
If you’re considering working with a Philadelphia trial lawyer, we invite you to read what our clients have said about their experiences with McEldrew Purtell. Their words are the most powerful testament to our values, our dedication, and our results.
Learn More
AI-Generated Child Sexual Abuse Images at Lancaster Country Day School: What Parents Should Know
McEldrew Purtell is actively investigating the AI-Generated Child Sexual Abuse case at Lancaster County Day School. Minors were sexually exploited when classmates used artificial intelligence to turn real photos into fabricated nude images. The Lancaster Country Day School case is…
Machine Guarding Injuries: Hazards, Liability, & What Workers and Their Families Should Know
Machine guarding is one of the most basic safety controls in industry, and one of the most important. According to OSHA, if not properly guarded, moving machine parts can cause amputations, crushes, degloving injuries, burns, and blindness. Federal rules require…
Legionnaires’ Disease Linked to Preventable Water System Failures
Legionnaires’ causes potentially deadly permanent effects due to a building’s water system being allowed to become dangerous. Legionnaires’ disease outbreaks frequently trace back to preventable failures such as stagnant water, poor temperature control, weak disinfectant levels, dirty cooling towers, and…
Sepsis and Serious Infections Linked to Product Defect: Contaminated Reusable Scopes
In a number of occurrences, people have gone in for routine or necessary scope procedures and come out with severe infections, repeat hospitalizations, IV antibiotics, and in some cases, death. The danger is not limited to one brand or one…
McEldrew Purtell and Dan Purtell Named Finalists in 2026 Pennsylvania Legal Awards
McEldrew Purtell is proud to announce that the firm has been named a finalist for Law Firm of the Year and Dan Purtell has been named a finalist for Managing Partner of the Year in the 2026 Pennsylvania Legal Awards…
Insulin Pump / CGM Failures: Over-Delivery, Under-Delivery, and Severe Outcomes
A defective or malfunctioning insulin pump does not just create inconvenience. It can lead to under-delivery or interruption of insulin, dangerous hyperglycemia, and emergency care. FDA reports on recent corrections describe hundreds of adverse events and dozens of injuries tied…
FAQs
Get answers to commonly asked questions regarding Crush Injuries & Compartment Syndrome and learn how we can help with your case.
What is “crush syndrome”?
A systemic condition after prolonged compression causing muscle breakdown (rhabdomyolysis) with risks of hyperkalemia and acute kidney injury. Requires rapid medical management.
What is acute compartment syndrome?
A dangerous rise in pressure within a muscle compartment that cuts off blood flow and nerve function—most often after trauma. It is a medical emergency. Once diagnosed, urgent fasciotomy is typically required.
Can delayed diagnosis of compartment syndrome be malpractice?
Potentially. When the standard of care (serial exams, timely pressure checks when indicated, prompt fasciotomy) is breached and causes harm. We review triage-to-OR timing, documentation, and the adequacy of decompression.
What should I do if I suspect compartment syndrome after an accident?
Go to the ER now. Document symptoms and timelines, keep discharge instructions, and contact a lawyer once you’re safe to preserve evidence and deadlines.
