Characteristics of orbital wall fractures in preschool and school-aged children

  • Yang D
  • Kim Y
  • Seo D
  • et al.
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE This study aimed to evaluate the injury patterns in pediatric patients with an orbital wall fracture (OWF) and to identify the differences in injury patterns between preschool and school-aged patients with OWF who presented to the emergency department. METHODS We performed a retrospective observational study in the emergency department of a tertiary hospital between January 2004 and March 2014. A total of 177 pediatric patients (<18 years) with OWF who underwent facial bone computed tomography scans with specific discharge codes were included. Patients were categorized into preschool (≤7 years) and school-aged (>7 years) pediatric groups. RESULTS The inferior wall was the most common fracture site in both the preschool and school-aged pediatric groups (50.0% vs. 64.4%, P=0.15). The male-to-female ratio and the mechanism of injury showed significant differences between the two age groups. Violence was the most common mechanism of injury in the school-aged pediatric group (49.3%), whereas falls from a height caused OWF in approximately half of the patients in the preschool pediatric group (42.9%). Concomitant injuries and facial fractures had a tendency to occur more frequently in the school-aged pediatric group. CONCLUSION Significant differences according to the sex and mechanisms of injury were identified in preschool and school-aged pediatric patients with OWF.

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APA

Yang, D. J., Kim, Y.-J., Seo, D.-W., Lee, H.-J., Park, I.-J., Sohn, C. H., … Lim, K. S. (2017). Characteristics of orbital wall fractures in preschool and school-aged children. Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine, 4(1), 32–37. https://doi.org/10.15441/ceem.16.153

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