Literature DB >> 9662848

[Eye injuries in childhood].

C Burgueño Montañés1, M Colunga Cueva, E González Fernández, S Cienfuegos García, A Díez-Lage Sánchez, M Diab Safa.   

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. 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.
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.
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.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9662848

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  An Esp Pediatr        ISSN: 0302-4342


  4 in total

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Authors:  Manal Bouhaimed; Manar Alwohaib; Shaikhah Alabdulrazzaq; Mohammad Jasem
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2.  Epidemiology, clinical profile and factors, predicting final visual outcome of pediatric ocular trauma in a tertiary eye care center of Central India.

Authors:  Satendra Singh; Bhavana Sharma; Kavita Kumar; Aditi Dubey; Kanchan Ahirwar
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 1.848

3.  Epidemiology of pediatric ocular trauma in the Chaoshan Region, China, 2001-2010.

Authors:  He Cao; Liping Li; Mingzhi Zhang; Hongni Li
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-08       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Characterization of Eyeball Loss in Four Cities of Colombia.

Authors:  F Hernán Moreno-Caviedes; Nórida Velez Cuellar; Margarita Caicedo Zapata; Gabriel Triana Reina; Azucena Sánchez
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2017-09-11
  4 in total

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