Literature DB >> 1770236

Influence of age on the management of blow-out fractures of the orbital floor.

K de Man1, R Wijngaarde, J Hes, P T de Jong.   

Abstract

This study concerns 50 patients with blow-out fractures of the orbital floor, including 15 children, and was designed to evaluate the influence of age on clinical presentation and postoperative results. Fourteen of the 15 children were found to have a trap-door fracture. This type of fracture was not found in adults, who usually present with a large "open-door" fracture. In trap-door fractures, orbital tissues are liable to become trapped and even strangulated. It is therefore suggested that young patients with severely restricted eyeball motility, an unequivocal positive forced duction test, and findings indicating blow-out fracture of the orbital floor on CT, should undergo operative treatment as soon as possible after injury. A "wait and see" policy, keeping the patient under observation, seems to be appropriate for blow-out fractures in adults. Surgical treatment is recommended only in those adult patients who demonstrate impairment of vertical eyeball motility within the mainfield of view after the haemorrhage and oedema have resolved and in whom change in motility is no longer seen and Hertel measurements have stabilized.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1770236     DOI: 10.1016/s0901-5027(05)80260-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg        ISSN: 0901-5027            Impact factor:   2.789


  12 in total

1.  Orbital trapdoor fractures.

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2.  Paediatric orbital trapdoor fracture misdiagnosed as a head injury: a cautionary tale!

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3.  Characteristics and surgical management of pure trapdoor fracture of the orbital floor in adults: a 15-year review.

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Review 4.  Pediatric orbital fractures.

Authors:  Adam J Oppenheimer; Laura A Monson; Steven R Buchman
Journal:  Craniomaxillofac Trauma Reconstr       Date:  2013-01-16

5.  Orbital Floor Fracture with Atypical Extraocular Muscle Entrapment Pattern and Intraoperative Asystole in an Adult.

Authors:  Farhan I Merali; Michael P Grant; Nicholas R Mahoney
Journal:  Craniomaxillofac Trauma Reconstr       Date:  2015-06-19

6.  Resolution of Vertical Gaze Following a Delayed Presentation of Orbital Floor Fracture With Inferior Rectus Entrapment: The Contributions of Charles E. Iliff and Joseph S. Gruss in Orbital Surgery.

Authors:  Arvind U Gowda; Paul N Manson; Nicholas Iliff; Michael P Grant; Arthur J Nam
Journal:  Craniomaxillofac Trauma Reconstr       Date:  2020-11-18

7.  Pediatric orbital floor fracture.

Authors:  Mark E Feldmann; Jennifer L Rhodes
Journal:  Eplasty       Date:  2012-06-12

8.  Diplopia of pediatric orbital blowout fractures: a retrospective study of 83 patients classified by age groups.

Authors:  Yun Su; Qin Shen; Ming Lin; Xianqun Fan
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2015-01       Impact factor: 1.889

9.  Pediatric orbital wall fractures: Prognostic factors of diplopia and ocular motility limitation.

Authors:  Yung Ju Yoo; Hee Kyung Yang; Namju Kim; Jeong-Min Hwang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-11-02       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Penetrating injury of orbital roof and brain sparing the eye ball in a pediatric patient: A rare occurrence.

Authors:  Vikul Kumar; Atul Kumar Singh; Kulwant Singh Bhaikhel
Journal:  J Pediatr Neurosci       Date:  2016 Apr-Jun
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