• Intensive care medicine · Dec 1995

    Multicenter Study

    Contribution of bronchoalveolar lavage to the diagnosis of posttraumatic pulmonary fat embolism.

    • O Mimoz, A Edouard, L Beydon, J Quillard, F Verra, J Fleury, F Bonnet, and K Samii.
    • Service d'Anesthesie-Reanimation, Universite de Paris Sud, Hopital de Bicetre, France.
    • Intensive Care Med. 1995 Dec 1;21(12):973-80.

    ObjectiveTo verify whether the determination of the percentage of cells recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage and containing fat inclusions is a useful diagnostic tool of posttraumatic pulmonary fat embolism.DesignProspective study.SettingSurgical Intensive Care Units in two university hospitals.Patients56 successive trauma patients needing prolonged postinjury mechanical ventilation, including 4 with clinical definite fat embolism syndrome, 5 in whom the diagnosis had been clinically suspected but was impossible to confirm or exclude before bronchoscopy, and 47 with no clinical evidence of the syndrome. Control groups included 8 patients without previous trauma who developed ARDS and 6 healthy surgical patients.MethodsBronchoalveolar lavage was performed within the first post-traumatic 3 days in trauma patients, at the beginning of the pulmonary disease in non trauma ARDS patients and just after anesthesic induction in healthy ortopedic patients. The magnitude of lipid content in alveolar cells was compared with the clinical pattern of the pulmonary fat embolism syndrome retrospectively evaluated at the seventh day postinjury in trauma patients.ResultsAll the patients with definite fat embolism syndrome had more than 70% of lavage cells containing fat droplets. The group of patients in whom the diagnosis of the fat embolism syndrome was suspected had percentages of fat cells above 30% in 4 out of 5 patients. A percentage of fat cells above 30% was only observed in 7 out of the 47 patients without clinical evidence of the syndrome. The percentage varied between 0% to 35% in the group of non trauma ARDS patients and between 0 to 5% in healthy surgical patients.ConclusionLipid inclusions in alveolar cells are common during traumatic and non-traumatic respiratory failure. Determination of the percentage of cells recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage and containing fat droplets may contribute to the diagnosis of the fat embolism syndrome in mechanically-ventilated trauma patients with respiratory failure provided that the significant threshold would be 30%.

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