Background: Cerebral fat embolism is a rare diagnosis that can occur after significant long bone trauma. Most patients have evidence of pulmonary involvement, but this case involved a patient with a pure neurologic manifestation of a fat embolism.
Case report: An 89-year-old woman presented to the emergency department as a transfer from an outside hospital with a diagnosis of air embolism after an episode of altered mental status and expressive aphasia. A secondary review of the patient's computed tomography angiography head imaging uncovered a cerebral fat embolism as the cause of the patient's acute neurologic event. The cerebral fat embolism was likely from a remote sacral fracture 6 weeks prior. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: When a patient presents with a concern for a stroke-like symptoms and a cerebral fat embolism is diagnosed, a thorough examination of the patient must be performed to identify the primary fracture site. Geriatric long bone fractures have well-known significant morbidity and mortality. An associated cerebral fat embolism can increase that mortality and morbidity and prompt diagnosis is important.
Keywords: altered mental status; aphasia; cerebral fat embolism; falls; geriatric trauma; neurology; orthopedics; pelvic trauma; sacral fracture; stroke; trauma.
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