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Journal Article

Citation

Court JH, Lu LM, Wang N, McGhee CN. Clin. Exp. Ophthal. 2019; 47(4): 469-477.

Affiliation

Department of Ophthalmology, Greenlane Clinical Centre, Auckland District Health Board, Auckland, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ceo.13439

PMID

30414237

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Open globe injuries (OGI) are a leading cause of monocular blindness world-wide with considerable cost to the individual and society.

BACKGROUND: To characterize the epidemiology, severity and outcomes of OGI treated at a major ophthalmology centre in New Zealand.

DESIGN: Retrospective study. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 385 eyes of 381 patients over a ten year period.

METHODS: Eligible patients were identified using diagnosis and surgery codes on hospital discharge summaries. Clinical notes were reviewed to determine patient demographics, injury details, treatments and outcomes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Complications of injury, visual acuity at 3 months and final follow-up, and final status of the eye.

RESULTS: The estimated annual incidence of OGI was 2.8 per 100,000. Working-age males predominated but age at injury ranged from 9 months to 90 years. Maori and Pacific peoples were over-represented. Injuries were severe with 58.7% presenting with vision of hand movements or worse. Penetrating injuries (56.4%) were most common, followed by globe ruptures (35.6%). Major complications included retinal detachment (15.8%), enucleation/evisceration (9.1%), phthisis bulbi (9.9%), endophthalmitis (2.6%), and sympathetic ophthalmia (0.26%). Despite the injury severity, 46% of eyes achieved final BCVA of ≥ 6/12. The Ocular Trauma Score (OTS) was a useful prognostic tool for stratifying severity of injury and predicting visual outcome (Fisher's exact test p<0.001).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The incidence and severity of OGI in NZ are comparable to global statistics. Surgical repair can effectively recover vision, predicted well by the OTS. We identified at-risk groups to target with education and prevention strategies.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Blunt trauma; Enucleation; Globe perforation; Ocular trauma; Post-traumatic endophthalmitis

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