## Correct Answer: D. Fat embolism Fat embolism syndrome (FES) is a systemic inflammatory response triggered by release of marrow fat and thromboplastic substances into the venous circulation following long-bone fractures. The classic triad—dyspnea, petechiae, and altered mental status—typically manifests 24–72 hours post-injury, making the 2-day timeline pathognomonic. Dyspnea results from fat emboli lodging in pulmonary capillaries, causing acute respiratory distress and hypoxemia. Petechiae (classically on chest, axillae, and conjunctiva) reflect thrombocytopenia and endothelial damage from circulating free fatty acids and their metabolites. The mechanism involves mechanical obstruction of capillaries plus chemical injury from oleic acid, which triggers complement activation, leukoembolization, and increased capillary permeability. In Indian trauma centers, FES complicates 0.5–2% of long-bone fractures but up to 5–10% of femoral shaft fractures—the most common site. Early stabilization of fractures reduces FES incidence. Management is supportive: high-flow oxygen, mechanical ventilation if needed, fluid restriction (to prevent pulmonary edema), and corticosteroids (methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg IV) within 12 hours of diagnosis, per consensus guidelines. Mortality ranges 5–15% in developed centers but remains higher in resource-limited Indian settings due to delayed diagnosis. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Pulmonary hypertension** — Pulmonary hypertension is a chronic condition (WHO Group 1–5 classification) or acute secondary response, not an acute systemic syndrome with petechiae. While FES may *cause* transient pulmonary hypertension via capillary obstruction, it does not explain the full clinical picture—especially petechiae and the acute 2-day timeline. This is a trap for students who focus only on dyspnea and hypoxemia. **B. Venous thromboembolism** — VTE (DVT/PE) presents with dyspnea and hypoxemia but does NOT produce the characteristic petechial rash. Petechiae are absent in uncomplicated VTE. FES is distinguished by its systemic inflammatory manifestations (petechiae, thrombocytopenia, fever) occurring within 72 hours of long-bone trauma—a temporal and clinical signature VTE lacks. NBE may pair VTE with trauma to test discrimination. **C. Air embolism** — Air embolism requires direct entry of air into the venous system (e.g., central line insertion, diving decompression) and presents acutely (minutes to hours) with sudden cardiovascular collapse, not a gradual 2-day syndrome. Petechiae are not a feature. The delayed presentation and systemic inflammatory signs rule out air embolism in this trauma context. ## High-Yield Facts - **Fat embolism syndrome (FES)** presents with the classic triad of dyspnea, petechiae, and altered mental status 24–72 hours post-fracture. - **Femoral shaft fractures** carry the highest FES risk (5–10% incidence); pelvic and multiple long-bone fractures also high-risk. - **Petechiae in FES** are pathognomonic, appearing on chest, axillae, and conjunctiva due to thrombocytopenia and endothelial injury from oleic acid. - **Methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg IV** within 12 hours of FES diagnosis reduces mortality and morbidity (consensus guideline). - **Early fracture stabilization** (within 24 hours) is the single most effective preventive measure for FES in trauma centers. ## Mnemonics **FES Triad (3 Ps)** **P**etechiae (rash), **P**ulmonary (dyspnea/hypoxemia), **P**sychiatric (confusion/altered mental status). Appears 24–72 hours post-long-bone fracture. **Risk Factors for FES (FRACTURE)** **F**emoral fractures, **R**ib fractures, **A**ge >40, **C**losed fractures, **T**rauma severity, **U**nstable pelvis, **R**epeated manipulation, **E**arly mobilization delay. Multiple factors increase risk exponentially. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair VTE with trauma to lure students into choosing thromboembolism based on dyspnea and hypoxemia alone, overlooking the pathognomonic petechial rash and 24–72 hour timeline unique to FES. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian trauma centers, a post-fracture patient with petechiae is FES until proven otherwise—early recognition and methylprednisolone within 12 hours can be life-saving. Delayed diagnosis in resource-limited settings contributes to higher mortality; high clinical suspicion is key. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 4 (Hemodynamic Disorders); Bailey & Love Ch. 32 (Fractures and Dislocations); Harrison Ch. 298 (Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.