10 Pearls for Open Globe Trauma Assessment
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- 10 Pearls for Open Globe Trauma Assessment
1. Proceed with caution:
Any periocular or
ocular trauma could be ruptured. Avoid placing undue pressure on the globe
until you establish that an open globe injury does not exist.
2. Assess the total patient
first
:
Make sure the emergency department staff thinks the patient is hemodynamically
stable before proceeding with your exam. Make sure the patient does not have
any concomitant injuries.
3. Make the patient
comfortable
: If the patient is in significant pain, give analgesics. If the patient is
nauseated, give anti-emetics. This will reduce the risk of the patient vomiting
or straining, which can increase the central venous pressure and potentiate
uveal prolapse in an open globe injury.
4.
Assess visual
acuity and pupils: It can be difficult to obtain a good visual
acuity in patients with altered mental status due to the trauma they have just
undergone, but this is important, as it can help in formulating a visual
prognosis. If the pupil cannot be visualized in the traumatized eye (e.g.,
secondary to hyphema), check for an afferent pupillary defect in the fellow eye.
5. Assess the adenexal
structures
: Don’t forget to evaluate for lid or canalicular lacerations. Sometimes
this can be difficult to do in the emergency department if there is a lot of
dried blood. Therefore, it may need to be determined in the OR.
6.
Visualize the
globe: Remember, as the ophthalmologist, your job is to assess the
eye. With significant preseptal edema, this can be a difficult task. Use lid
speculums or lid retractors if needed (taking care not to press on the eye).
7.
Evaluate the
fellow eye: Make sure that you conduct a complete exam on the fellow
eye for any signs of trauma or changes in visual acuity.
8. Use additional testing
and imaging modalities
: If hyphema is present, consider checking Sickledex.
Consider checking PT/INR if the patient is anti-coagulated. Ask the emergency
department to check screening bloodwork and testing, including CBC, Chem 7, CXR
and EKG to obtain OR clearance. CT scans may be helpful in confirming globe
rupture and assessing for intraorbital or intraocular foreign bodies, as well
as orbital wall or other facial fractures.
9.
Arrange OR to
do the repair: Make sure the patient stays NPO and establish the last
time he or she ate. Determine if the patient has had a recent tetanus shot.
Place a Fox shield over the traumatized eye. Speak with the surgeons who will
be managing the injury, as well as anesthesia and OR staff. Cases are usually
performed under general anesthesia.
10.
Talk with
patient and family: Don’t forget to discuss the surgery and visual
prognosis for the eye with the patient and any family members present. Since
these patients may have an altered mental status, it is important that the
family has a good understanding of the injury and is given a chance to ask
questions. Obtain informed consent. Depending on the extent of the globe
injury, it may also be pertinent to discuss the possibility of primary
enucleation/evisceration if repair is impossible.
Additional information you can
find on the website:
https://www.aao.org/young-ophthalmologists/yo-info/article/10-pearls-open-globe-trauma-assessment