Thanks again for the patience and replies, LLSouthAmerica. I know some of my questions got asked pretty frequently, but I appreciate you still took to the time to answer them. I've done a fair bit of research since I've started posting here now.
Also, you're the only medical student in the forums that I know of. Not only that, you actually went through LL. Your input is actually invaluable here. I was reading more papers related to CLL by Catagni and others on pubmed and I noticed all the deaths related to LL surgery I am currently aware of happened due to forms of embolism. Being a medical student yourself, what was it that made you think going through the surgery was still worth the risk?
Reading
Wikipedia as a layman paints a not particularly bright picture:
Fat emboli occur in almost 90% of all people with severe injuries to bones, although only 10% of these are symptomatic.
Again, though, I'm not a medical student, so I can't tell if this should be read as scarily as it is for me. I'd like my chances of death from embolism (fat, pulmonary or otherwise) to be fractions of zero percent, not possibly whole single percents.