Abstract
Ninety-six cases of anterior globe perforation in children less than 16 years old, requiring surgical repair, were reviewed. Seventy-three patients were male and 23 female, with a mean age of 9 years 4 months. Perforation involving just the cornea was associated with a good visual prognosis unless: it involved the visual axis, resulting in corneal scarring and/or significant astigmatism (>3.0 DS); it involved greater than one-quarter of corneal diameter; or there was non-compliance with spectacles/patching in patients younger than 8 years old. Injuries involving the lens in those younger than 8 years were associated with a far worse prognosis due to the problems of correcting aphakia. Surgical delay and method of injury did not affect prognosis. Some patients fail to re-attend and greater patient/parent education prior to discharge is recommended. © 1994 Royal College of Ophthalmologists.
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Baxter, R. J., Hodgkins, P. R., Calder, I., Morrell, A. J., Vardy, S., & Elkington, A. R. (1994). Visual outcome of childhood anterior perforating eye injuries: Prognostic indicators. Eye (Basingstoke), 8(3), 349–352. https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1994.73
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