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[Eye injuries in childhood].
- Source :
-
Anales espanoles de pediatria [An Esp Pediatr] 1998 Jun; Vol. 48 (6), pp. 625-30. - Publication Year :
- 1998
-
Abstract
- Objective: The purpose of this study was to analyze the epidemiological, damage and preventative aspects of the pediatric ocular injuries treated during the last five years in our hospital.<br />Patients and Methods: We have revised all clinical histories of ocular injuries in the Emergency Services of the Asturias Central Hospital from January 1992 to December 1996. Two hundred fifty-seven cases were reviewed and the following parameters were studied: age, sex, kind of injury, causes and places where they originated, hospitalization or no, and functional sequeale.<br />Results: Eighty percent of the cases were male (206 patients). Most, 85.6% (220 cases) did not require hospital attention, while hospitalization was necessary in 14.4% (37 cases). Concerning the latter, 73% (27 cases) were in the hospital less than 7 days, while the other 27% (10 cases) were hospitalized from 8 to 14 days. As for the cause of and the location where the injuries took place, our results were as follows: school-home 33%, playtime-leisure 32%, sports accidents 12%, assaults 10%, traffic accidents 3% and unknown causes 10%. Minor injuries tend to imply the full restitution of sight (a large percentage were revised by their own ophthalmologist). Serious injuries caused the following functional losses: loss of eyeball in 2 cases (traffic accident), monolateral blindness in 2 cases serious amblyopia in 10 cases, and moderate amblyopia in 6 cases.<br />Conclusions: Males suffer injuries 4 times more frequently than females and these are very infrequent before the age of 3 years. Traffic accident injuries are rare in comparison to in adulthood. Important immediate visual sequale were seen in 7.8% of the cases, although these may also appear later in cases that at first present good function during the acute phase.
Details
- Language :
- Spanish; Castilian
- ISSN :
- 0302-4342
- Volume :
- 48
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Anales espanoles de pediatria
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 9662848