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Fat Embolism. Cindy Fehr Malaspina University-College BSN Nursing Program Nursing 335 – Fall 2005. FES Facts. Major cause of delayed recovery & mortality after limb # Highest incidence with # long bones (femur, tibia, ribs, fibula, pelvis)
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Fat Embolism Cindy Fehr Malaspina University-College BSN Nursing Program Nursing 335 – Fall 2005
FES Facts • Major cause of delayed recovery & mortality after limb # • Highest incidence with # long bones (femur, tibia, ribs, fibula, pelvis) • Up to 90% with multiple trauma may develop FES although exact incidence unknown • Estimated 20% mortality rate (higher for older adults & those with multiple co-morbidities) • Typically seen 24-72 hrs post-injury • Other causes blunt trauma, parenteral lipid infusion, acute pancreatitis, diabetes, burns, liposuction, cardiopulmonary bypass, decompression sickness, sickle-cell crisis
Signs & Symptoms • Irritability • Restlessness • Tachypnea • Tachycardia • Changes in mental status • Diffuse crackles (late finding) • Dyspnea • Hypoxia • Fever • Petechiae in vest distribution
Etiology Theories • Release of fat globules from bone marrow into venous circulation after # & spread to various organs (lungs, brain, kidneys) producing ischemia & inflammation • Hormonal changes d/t trauma cause release of fatty acids & neutral fats with platelet aggregation & fat globule formation as a result • Exact pathophysiology unknown
Pathophysiology • Depending on where FE lodges determines effect effects range from mild & undetectable to severe & life-threatening (lead to ARDS, MODS, death) • Into pulmonary circulation disorder similar to ARDS perfusion pressures , pulmonary vessels engorge lungs more rigid, workload to Rt side heart s • Fat globules occluding pulmonary circulation hydrolize into free fatty acids lodge in pulmonary vessels, injure endothelial tissue microvascular permeability pulmonary edema & activate lung surfactant hemorrhagic pulmonary edema & patchy alveolar collapse severe hypoxia
Prevention • Prudent tx of long bone fractures • Careful handling & avoiding unnecessary manipulation of injured area immobilization of unstable #s • Appropriate splinting • Prompt surgical fixation (within 24-48 hrs is best) • Early aggressive resuscitation to prevent hypovolemia • Adequate pain management
Diagnostics • No one specific test or definitive manifestation • CXR, ABGs, CT, VQ scan • Multi-system review of clinical findings • Gurd’s Criteria Framework • One major/three minor criteria OR two major/two minor criteria Major Criteria • Nonpalpable reddish brown petechial rash over upper body in vest distribution (especially axilla) within 24-36 hrs post-injury & resolves quickly • Respiratory symptoms bilateral CXR changes, tachypnea, dyspnea, hypoxia • Cerebral signs without cause agitation, seizures, coma
Diagnostics cont. • Gurd’s Criteria Framework cont. Minor Criteria • Tachycardia • Temperature > 101.3 °F (38.5 °C) • Retinal hemorrhages with emboli present in retina with opthalmoscopic examination • Fat globules in urine or sputum • Sudden Hgb & HCT & Platelet count • sedimentation rate
Treatment • Supportive treatment of respiratory function • High Fowler’s position • O2, DB&C to minimize atelectasis & improve pulmonary function • Intubation, CPAP • Steroids controversial use to inflammatory effects • Fluid volume replacement prevent circulatory instability • u/o > 30 ml/hr; MAR > 60 mm Hg helps prevent shock, perfuse kidneys, prevent mobilization of fat • Support other organs effected renal, hepatic…