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Acute stroke related to fat emboli
Acute ischemia with appropriate clinical history
Long bone or pelvic fractures, cardiac surgery, joint replacement surgery
Often mimics thromboembolic stroke
Commonly affects both gray and white matter
May affect deep and periventricular white matter
May affect deep gray nuclei
May involve typical vascular territory
May mimic “watershed” infarct
NECT: Typically negative acutely
Hypodense MCA sign related to fat within MCA
T2WI: Multiple small, scattered hyperintense foci
DWI: Acute diffusion restriction
Acute cerebral ischemia-infarction
Acute hypertensive encephalopathy, PRES
Vasculitis
Fat emboli can pass through pulmonary capillaries without shunting lesions and result in systemic embolization (brain, kidneys most commonly)
Fat embolism syndrome: Pulmonary, CNS, and cutaneous manifestations
Hypoxia, deteriorating mental status, petechiae
Neurological dysfunction varies from confusion to encephalopathy with coma and seizures
Uncommon but potentially life threatening
Fat embolism syndrome after fractures: Up to 2.2%
Acute stroke related to fat emboli
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