Tıp Fakültesi / Faculty of Medicine
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/1403
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Item Clinical Characteristics And Outcomes Of Ocular Injuries In Pediatric Patients(2022) Bayar, Sezin Akca; Ozturker, Zeynep Kayaarasi; Yilmaz, Gursel; 35485471BACKGROUND: Childhood eye injuries are one of the most common causes of acquired unilateral blindness. In this study, our purpose was to investigate the demographics, etiology, and outcome of pediatric patients with ocular injury. METHODS: The charts of children with ocular trauma who presented to Baskent University Hospitals, between January 1, 2017 and December 31, 2019 were retrospectively reviewed. All patients who were under 16 years of age were included. Data were collected on age, sex, time of trauma, injury type, associated injuries, treatments, visual impairment, intraocular pressure (IOP), and ophthalmic sequelae. Ocular traumas were classified according to the Birmingham Eye Trauma Terminology (BETT) system. RESULTS: A total of 21 patients were identified. Male-female ratio was 13/8. The mean age of the patients was 8.5??3.4 years. Mean post-treatment follow-up was 8.2??4.3 months. Injury was unilateral in all cases (10 right eye, 11 left eye). Fifteen patients (71.4%) had open globe, and 6 (28.5%) had closed globe injury. Type of injury was rupture in 7 cases, perforation in 5, penetration in 4, and intraocular foreign body in 4. A total of 5 cases were documented to have retinal detachment during the follow-up. Sharp injuries were documented in 11 (64.7%) cases, and blunt in 6 (35.2%). The most frequent finding was hyphema in blunt injury, and corneal laceration in perforating injury. Five patients had choroidal hemorrhage, 3 had commotio retinae, 2 had intravitreal hemorrhage, 1 had subhyaloidal hemorrhage, 1 had macular hole, and 1 had optic nerve avulsion. Lens aspiration was performed in 12 (57.1%) cases, and 2 of them had intraocular lens implantation. In children whose initial vision was able to be taken, 4 had no light perception, 7 had light perception-counting fingers, and 5 had best-corrected visual acuity of 0.05???0.3. At final visit, 61.9% of patients had a VA of 0.05???0.8. Corneal scar or leucoma was observed in 14 (66.6%) cases at last visit. One eye was enucleated due to post-traumatic endophthalmitis that did not respond to treatment. At final visit, IOP 6 mmHg was identified in 2 cases and 21 mmHg in 4. CONCLUSION: Anterior segment damage is the main cause of visual morbidity in pediatric ocular trauma. Injuries with sharp objects occur twice as often as blunt trauma and reduce vision with residual corneal scarring in about two-thirds of patients. Understanding the pattern of eye injuries is useful in determining the strategies required to protect children???s eye health.Item Clinical Spectrum of Ocular and Visual Dysfunction in Children with Periventricular Leukomalacia: A Need for an Interdisciplinary Approach(2021) Ozturker, Zeynep Kayaarasi; Bayar, Sezin Akca; Oto, Sibel; Aksoy, Sibel; Akkoyun, Imren; Sezer, Taner; 0000-0001-5109-755X; 0000-0003-0171-4200; 0000-0003-1395-6207; 0000-0002-2860-7424; AAJ-2406-2021; AAJ-4668-2021; AAK-7713-2021The study aimed to evaluate the ocular motility and visual and optic disc abnormalities in children diagnosed with periventricular leukomalacia (PVL). A retrospective analysis was performed on 51 consecutive children who had ophthalmic symptoms and were diagnosed with PVL by using magnetic resonance imaging. The patients were assessed for visual function, strabismus, cycloplegic refraction, fundus examination, and if appropriate, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography and visual field testing were applied. The primary outcome measures were the prevalence and visual and ocular motility dysfunctions. Mean age was 5.72 +/- 2.6 years (range = 1-12), median birth weight was 2,740 g (range =1,240-3,460), and median gestational age was 34 weeks (range = 28-38). In total, 21 patients (39.6%) had neurological deficit, 11 (21.5%) had intellectual disability, and 19 (37.2%) had no neurological symptom. In the spherical equivalent refractive error and cylinder power analysis, 10 patients had >= 3.0 D myopia, 15 had >= 3.0 D hyperopia, and eight had >= 2.50 D astigmatism. Thirteen (25.4%) children had a best-corrected visual acuity between 20/40 and 20/20 for Snellen card, while 9 (17.6%) had strabismic amblyopia and 6 (11.7%) had anisometropic amblyopia. Manifest strabismus was present in 35 patients (68.6%); of whom 12 had esotropia (23.5%), 16 had exotropia (31.3%) and 6 had vertical deviation (11.7%). Manifest or latent nystagmus was detected in 14 patients (27.4%). In 28 patients (54.9%), there was optic nerve abnormality. Two patients had hypoplastic disc, 14 had optic disc pallor, 7 had large cupping, and 5 had total optic atrophy. Six subjects underwent reliable visual field (VF) examinations, and all six had abnormal VFs, with inferior fields being most affected. Ocular motility disorders, optic nerve abnormalities, VF defects, and low visual acuity are common findings in this cohort of PVL patients and maybe the only presenting signs of the disease. The recognition of the visual disabilities and implementation of early rehabilitation may have a significant benefit in these children.