Liquid Fat in the Knee Joint after Trauma
- 28 December 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 277 (26) , 1411-1412
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm196712282772607
Abstract
WHEN blood is aspirated from the knee joint after a knee injury, it is often mixed with visible droplets of liquid fat.1 Fat in the blood can also be recognized on x-ray examination by the detection of fat and a fat-blood level on lateral radiographs of the knee made with the x-ray beam horizontal.2 The presence of liquid fat is of interest not only as indirect evidence of a fracture that may be occult but also, because a large volume of fat is often present in the joint, for certain implications regarding fat embolism.Case ReportsGase 1. A 38-year-old . . .This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- A New Clinical and Experimental Concept on Fat EmbolismNew England Journal of Medicine, 1967
- Some considerations in the roentgenology of fractures and dislocationsSeminars in Roentgenology, 1966
- SOME IMPORTANT DIAGNOSTIC AND TECHNICAL FUNDAMENTALS IN THE RADIOLOGY OF TRAUMA, WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON SKELETAL TRAUMARadiologic Clinics of North America, 1966
- Flussiges Fett Im Kniegelenk Nach TraumaActa Radiologica, 1942
- Fat in traumatic effusions of the knee jointThe American Journal of Surgery, 1929