| Literature DB >> 34282643 |
Ta-Li Hsu1, Tien-Chi Li2, Fei-Pi Lai3, Ming Ouhyoung3, Chih-Hung Chang1, Cheng-Tzu Wang1.
Abstract
Fat embolism syndrome (FES) is a complication of long bone fractures that often occurs within 72 hours of injury. Early-onset isolated cerebral fat embolism is catastrophic and rarely reported. We herein present a rare case of delayed-onset isolated cerebral FES that developed 10 days after definite fixation of a left tibial plateau fracture. A 70-year-old woman was injured in a traffic accident and diagnosed with a left tibial plateau fracture. However, she developed sudden loss of consciousness (E4V1M1) and quadriplegia 10 days after fracture fixation. Her vital signs showed no respiratory distress. Diagnosis of isolated cerebral FES was made based on magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, the findings of which were compatible with the clinical neurological findings. After supportive care and rehabilitation, her consciousness became clear on the second day of admission, and her consciousness changed to E4V5M6. She gradually regained strength in her right limbs but had residual left limb paraplegia. Isolated cerebral FES should always be considered for patients who develop a change in consciousness, even beyond 72 hours after injury. Imaging may not initially show definitive abnormalities. Repeated magnetic resonance imaging should be considered if the initial clinical presentation does not fully meet Gurd's criteria.Entities:
Keywords: Fat embolism syndrome; Glasgow coma scale; Gurd’s criteria; case report; magnetic resonance imaging; tibial plateau fracture
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34282643 PMCID: PMC8295961 DOI: 10.1177/03000605211028415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Figure 1.Preoperative and postoperative radiographs and computed tomography images of the left knee. (a–d) Preoperative anteroposterior and lateral views of the left knee. (e, f) Postoperative anteroposterior and lateral radiographs.
Laboratory findings.
| Laboratory findings | Arterial blood gas analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| WBC count | 9.7 × 103/µL | pH | 7.514 |
| Hemoglobin | 12.4 g/dL | pCO2 | 29.1 mmHg |
| Platelet count | 395 × 103/uL | pO2 | 91.7 mmHg |
| INR | 1.16 | HCO3− | 22.9 mmol |
| PT | 11.6 s | Sodium | 136 mmol/L |
| aPTT | 225.9 s | Potassium | 3.4 mmol/L |
| Fibrinogen | 141.4 mg/dL | Calcium | 9.3 mg/dL |
| FDP | 8.7 µg/mL | Creatinine | 1.06 mg/dL |
| D-dimers | 3360 ng/mL FEU | ||
| CRP | 2.3 mg/dL | ||
CRP, C-reactive protein; WBC, white blood cell; INR, international normalize ratio; PT, prothrombin time; aPTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; FDP, fibrin degradation products; FEU, fibrinogen equivalent units; pCO2, partial pressure of carbon dioxide; pO2, partial pressure of oxygen; HCO3-, bicarbonate.
Figure 2.(a) Chest radiograph and (b) computed tomography image of the brain on the 10th postoperative day.
Figure 3.Magnetic resonance imaging series of the brain. (a) Diffusion-weighted image 3 hours after loss of consciousness. (b) Diffusion-weighted image 12 hours after loss of consciousness.