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The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS
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The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries

Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS

Page 2: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Decision Making: Health care practitioners often make diagnostic decisions within seconds of patient contact

The first decisions should be: How severe is the injury? How urgent? Should be patient be referred or retained? Step One in All injuries: Get the visual acuity even if the acuity is count fingers, hand motion or light perception. There is a correlation between the initial visual acuity and the outcome. Lawyers love it when there is no visual acuity in the chart!

Page 3: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.
Page 4: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Chemical Burns:

If you are called about a chemical exposure, tell employer to wash the eye with water for at least 15 minutes before transporting the patient

Page 5: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

The higher the Ph, the worse - alkaline is worse than acidWhy?? Alkaline denatures the protein of the eye (think of frying an eye), acids do not, although highly concentrated acids are dangerous. You must take the Ph from the conjunctiva immediately with Ph paper- this determines whether the chemical is acid or alkaline and how concentrated.  Washing with balanced salt solution is mandatory until the Ph reaches 7.0 NEUTRAL

Page 6: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Industry alkaline usage:

cleaners- fast food industry and car industry- grease removal, plumbing- hair removal agents, construction- cement and stucco, etc.

Page 7: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

The analogy of an eye with a camera is flawed because the main portion of the eye that focuses the images on the retina is NOT the lens but the cornea. Any damage to the cornea impairs the visual acuity.

Page 8: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Corneal alkaline burn with severe permanent corneal scarring

All alkaline chemical burns- or concentrated acid burns should be referred Treatment- high dosage steroids with antibiotic coverage

Page 9: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Flying Particles

Page 10: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Major Injuries: High Speed Injuries- extremely dangerous

• Pounding Metal on Metal– A mechanic using a soft metal mallet striking a

hardened metal• A soft metal fragment breaks off like a hand

grenade- perforating the eye • Any explosion injuries

Page 11: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

All high speed injuries should be imaged if an ocular perforation can’t be ruled out; usually

the foreign body is radio opaque

Page 12: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Possible Consequences of Perforating Injury

• Cataract if lens is perforated

• Retinal tear and/or detachment

• Choroidal rupture

• Infectious enophthalmitis

All high speed injuries should be referred

Page 13: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.
Page 14: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Retinal Detachment

Retinal Detachment from retinal tear

Page 15: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Normal macula and optic nerve

Scarred choroidal and retinal tear with loss of central vision

Page 16: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.
Page 17: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Perforating Corneal Injury

Page 18: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Low Speed Particulate Injuries

In my experience the most common injuries are:

• Metal from grinding or drilling• Metal from Welding• Debris from weed whacker • Particles - wind born

Page 19: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Rusted Metallic Intracorneal ParticlesWhen an iron containing foreign body strikes the cornea rust forms immediately

•If you are going to remove an iron containing foreign body, you must remove not only the particle but the rust ring with an electric foreign body burr under slit lamp visualization- nothing else will remove the rust completely.

•If you can’t remove it all, don’t remove it at all. The outcome of multiple surgeries and the delay in removing the rust causes more tissue damage, greater loss of visual acuity due to corneal astigmatism and scarring. This can’t be corrected with eyeglasses or contacts - permanent visual loss.

• In short, if you can’t do the complete job, refer immediately. The outcome will be better and the time off from work lessened.

Page 20: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Foreign Body under the Upper Eyelid

The second most common injury I see is a foreign body under the upper eyelid.

If you have corneal abrasions superiorly with vertical scratches on fluorescein staining, look under the upper eyelid.

Page 21: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Conjunctival Foreign Body (the most missed diagnosis)

Remove the foreign body and patch with antibiotic ointment- avoid steroids particularly with plant injuries due to potential fungal contamination

Page 22: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Inverting the Upper Eyelid

Have patient look down Press cotton tip down, grab eyelashes,and flip lid over cotton tip

Page 23: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Paper Clip Eyelid Retractor

Page 24: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Patching

Patching prevents the eye from blinking which greatly enhances corneal healing. This significantly speeds the patient’s recovery.

Avoid patching in severe chemical burns or viral keratitis that requires frequent application of medication.

Page 25: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Herpes simplex Keratitisinduced by Eye Trauma

Page 26: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Herpes simplex Iritisinduced by Eye Trauma

Page 27: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Herpes zosterinduced by Trauma

If the tip of the nose is involved- Hutchinson’s Sign, the interior of the eye is involved- iritis, keratitis or secondary glaucoma.

Page 28: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Complications of Herpes simplex and Herpes zoster in the eye

• Corneal scarring with decreased vision

• Decreased corneal sensation

• Secondary glaucoma

• Facial scarring (H. zoster only)

• Lacrimal obstruction

• Iritis

Page 29: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Herpetic Corneal Scarring

Page 30: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Treatment of Herpetic Eye Disease

• Topical and systemic anti-virals

• Topical or systemic steroids

• Glaucoma medication

• Lubricants

• Contact lenses

All herpetic eye infections should be referred to an ophthalmologist

Page 31: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Blunt Trauma to the Eye and Orbit

Blow out fractures can be very serious

• Industrial causes: • punches, • bungee tie downs, • hydraulic injuries

Blow out fractures - a good thing?

An eye rupture is prevented since the blunt force caused a blow out fracture

Page 32: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.
Page 33: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Manifestations of Blow Out Fx

• Diplopia from the inability to look up due to entrapment of inferior rectus muscle in floor defects - more common with small fractures

• Enophthalmos (sunken in eye) often associated with combined medial wall and floor fractures

• Decreased skin sensation in cheek and canine tooth area from infraorbital nerve damage

Page 34: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Surgical Indications for Blow Outs

• Entrapment of inferior rectus with diplopia

• Severe enophthalmos

• Not all blow outs should be operated

Page 35: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Orbital Fractures

• Tripod or trimalar fractures carry a much higher percentage of ocular injury

• All orbital fractures should have dilated eye examinations• All suspected orbital fractures should have imaging with

CT scans• Bilateral blacks eyes (raccoon eyes) are indicative of an

occult basilar skull fracture

Page 36: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Other Blunt Trauma

• Hyphema - blood in the anterior chamber• Lens dislocation• Retinal tears, detachment, dialysis• Vitreous hemorrhage• Optic Nerve injuries• Brain injuries

Page 37: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Hyphema

• All hyphemas are serious the greater the hyphema, the worse the outcome

• Most hyphemas clear spontaneously on complete bed rest and patching.

• Steroids and glaucoma medications are often needed to treat the inflammation and secondary glaucoma.

• Permanent glaucoma due to angle recession and cataracts can occur

Page 38: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Cause of Hyphema

Page 39: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Hyphema Images

Page 40: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Optic Nerve Injury

Page 41: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Lens Dislocation

Page 42: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Eyelid and Tear Duct Injuries

Page 43: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.
Page 44: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Horner’s Syndrome

• Horner’s Syndrome results from a sympathetic nerve injury from neck trauma

• Ptosis of the upper eyelid • Miosis (small pupil)• Anhydrosis of the affected side

Page 45: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Summary

• I am glad that my lecture was after lunch, not before.

• Almost all eye injuries can be avoided if proper precautions are taken.

• Most foreign bodies occur with grinding. Working above the head causes more injuries because the eye protection doesn’t adequately cover the eye from above.

• Chemical injuries should be treated immediately with lavage until the Ph is neutral and an immediate referral is advised.

• Severe alkaline burns can result blindness that can’t be treated with any modality - corneal transplantation or mucous membrane grafting

• All severe blunt trauma needs imaging and a dilated eye examination.

Page 46: The Prevention and Management of Eye Injuries Robert E. Neger, MD, FACS.

Summary Continued

• If there is a chance of an occult intraocular foreign body, x-rays must be performed with multiple images in different eye positions- plain films or CT scans

• Delay in the diagnosis or treatment, or a misdiagnosis are by definition malpractice.

• I hope that there are things from this lecture that are useful to you in caring for the injured.

• I am always available by telephone 408-971-1949 to you for advice. If I am physically in my office, I will see your patients as soon as possible.

• Thank you for this opportunity to speak with you today.