Title of article :
Etiology and severity of various forms of ocular war injuries in patients presenting at an Army Hospital in Pakistan
Author/Authors :
Syed, Abid Hassan Naqvi Department of Ophthalmology - Combined Military Hospital, Peshawar, Pakistan , Malik, Sidra , Zulfiqaruddin, Syed Department of Ophthalmology - Combined Military Hospital, Peshawar, Pakistan , Anwar, Syeda Birjees Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Peshawar, Pakistan , Nayyar, Shahzad Dept. of ENT & Head and Neck Surgery - Combined Military Hospital, Peshawar, Pakistan
Abstract :
Objective: To determine the etiology and severity of various forms of ocular war injuries in patients
presenting at an Army Hospital in Pakistan.
Methods: This cross sectional study was conducted at the Department of Ophthalmology, Combined
Military Hospital, Peshawar over four years period from June 2012 through March 2016, Two hundred ten
consecutive soldiers who presented with ocular war injuries were included for analysis after taking written
informed consent. A predesigned proforma was used to record patient’s demographic details along with the
cause, side, type and severity of injury, ocular trauma score was also recorded at presentation.
Results: The mean age of the patients was 29.34±5.35 years. All of them were males. Left side was more
frequently involved (n=126, 60.0%) and the most frequent underlying cause was IED blast injury (n=114,
54.3%). Closed globe injuries were more frequent and were recorded in 120 (57.1%) patients. Upon assigning
Ocular Trauma Score, Grade-V (28.6%) injuries were the most frequent followed by Grade-I (25.7%), Grade
III (25.7%), Grade II (11.4%) and Grade IV (8.6%). When stratified for the type of injury, OTS Grade I injuries
were highest (60.0%) among patients with open globe injuries, hence poorer prognosis, while OTS Grade V
injuries were highest (50.0%) among patients with closed globe injuries (p=0.000).
Conclusion: IED blast injuries are most frequently encountered ocular war injuries often involving soldiers
in the age group 20-30 years. These open globe injuries had worst clinical presentation to begin with and
poorer prognosis than closed globe injuries.
Keywords :
Ocular War Injuries , Open Globe , Closed Globe , Ocular Trauma Score
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics