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Journal Article

Citation

Betts T, Ahmed S, Maguire S, Watts P. Eye 2017; 31(8): 1146-1154.

Affiliation

Consultant Ophthalmologist, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/eye.2017.25

PMID

28338664

Abstract

PURPOSETo identify the spectrum of non-vitreoretinal ocular injury due to child maltreatment.

METHODSAll language search of MEDLINE, PsychINFO, EMBASE, AMED, Web of Science, and CINAHL databases, 1950-2015, was conducted. INCLUSION CRITERIA: explicit confirmation of injury aetiology, age <18 years, examination conducted by an ophthalmologist. Exclusion: post-mortem data, organic diseases, review articles. Standardised critical appraisal and narrative synthesis was conducted of included publications by two independent reviewers.

RESULTSOf 1492 studies identified, 153 full texts were assessed, 49 underwent full review, resulting in five included studies: three case series and two case reports. The 26 included cases describe a wide variety of ocular, facial and skeletal injuries occurring as a consequence of child maltreatment. Ocular signs included periorbital oedema, chemosis, injection, abrasion, hyphaema, and cataract. Of interest all children that had suffered physical abuse with ocular injury had subconjunctival haemorrhages. Children presenting with abusive ocular injuries had a mean age of 13.9 months (range 1-68), while those who suffered violent corporal punishment were considerably older (mean 96 months). All cases, apart from severe corporal punishment, underwent screening for occult fractures, but neuroimaging only apparent in 2/5 eligible cases.

CONCLUSIONAlthough, the face is the most common site of abusive injury, there is a paucity of high-quality data on non-vitreoretinal ocular abusive injury. Thus, while subconjunctival haemorrhages are a potential sentinel injury of maltreatment, and may warrant further evaluation, the lack of large-scale published data limits our ability to highlight further specific characteristics of non-vitreoretinal ocular injury indicative of child abuse.Eye advance online publication, 24 March 2017; doi:10.1038/eye.2017.25.


Language: en

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