Portable head computed tomography in the diagnosis of cerebral fat embolism secondary to cardiac surgery.

Journal: The Neurohospitalist
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Cerebral fat embolism (CFE) has been diagnosed previously by both brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and dedicated head computed tomography (HCT) studies. The most commonly reported feature on CT is the presence of the "hypodense artery sign," although the number of reported cases has been minimal to date.

Methods: Report of a single case involving a 88-year-old patient who underwent cardiac surgery. Postoperatively, the patient developed right hemiparesis. Contraindications existed for performing brain MRI and dedicated head CT. Portable head CT (pHCT) was obtained. Hounsfield unit measurement was used.

Results: A hypodense artery sign was visualized, and Hounsfield unit measurement indicated fat density. Diagnosis was determined to be CFE.

Conclusions: This case report emphasizes that pHCT quality may be sufficient to diagnose CFE and offers a viable alternative when MRI or HCT is contraindicated.

Authors
Relevant Conditions

Stroke