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[Functional prognosis in ocular trauma. Does visual deficiency help in localizing the injuries that cause it?].

Authors :
Lima-Gómez V
García-Pacheco JM
Source :
Cirugia y cirujanos [Cir Cir] 2004 Nov-Dec; Vol. 72 (6), pp. 447-52.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Background: Prevalence of reported trauma-related blindness is 0.6% with almost half of serious ocular injuries involving the retina. Causes of visual deficit (VD) in ocular trauma were identified in patients with different grades (visual capacity), in order to determine the rate of poor functional prognosis at initial evaluation caused by posterior segment involvement and to identify a grade that could predict it.<br />Methods: Ocular trauma referrals were re-qualified (1995-2003) according to the standardized classification. VD (grade >1) and zone were evaluated. The rate of VD and zone III with VD were determined. Injuries causing VD were identified and grouped by zone. The rate of these injuries was compared by zone, between each grade and the remaining, with chi2.<br />Results: Five hundred fifty-seven eyes were included (mean age 27.7 years), 165 had VD (29.6%, CI 95% 25.8-33.4); 93 had zone III involvement (16.7%), 53 of whom had VD (9.5%, CI 95% 7.1-11.9%). Among injuries that caused VD (n = 323), 102 involved zone I (31.6%), 144 zone II (44.6%), and 77 zone III (23.8%). Injuries in zone III were more frequent in grade 5 (52%) than in the remaining groups (21.5%, p = 0.0005, OR 3.9).<br />Conclusions: In 90.5% of the eyes (CI 95%, 88.1-92.9), injuries caused VD by means of anterior segment involvement or did not cause it at all. A high rate of ocular trauma patients, even those with grade 5 at initial evaluation, may have an opportunity for visual recovery with early referral.

Details

Language :
Spanish; Castilian
ISSN :
0009-7411
Volume :
72
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cirugia y cirujanos
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15694048