Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile

Purpose: Strabismus (heterotropia) is one of several possible complications of ocular traumatic injury. This condition is associated with a decreased quality of life. The purpose of this study is to present the functional outcomes of a series of 35 patients presenting with strabismus secondary to ey...

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Main Authors: Luis Alberto Suazo, Paulina Liberman, Fuad George Gauro, Mario Tomas Zanolli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology 2014-05-01
Series:Vision Pan-America
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.sfu.ca/paao/index.php/journal/article/view/187
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spelling doaj-a39bbf2e782a4312a2ec0f311ba0c9a32020-11-24T21:40:51ZengPan-American Association of OphthalmologyVision Pan-America2219-46652219-46732014-05-01132445210.15324/vpa.v13i2.187118Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in ChileLuis Alberto Suazo0Paulina Liberman1Fuad George Gauro2Mario Tomas Zanolli3Unidad de Trauma Ocular, Hospital del Salvador, Santiago – ChileFacultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago – ChileFacultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago – ChileDepartamento de Oftalmología Pediátrica y Estrabismo, Hospital Padre Hurtado, Santiago - Chile.Purpose: Strabismus (heterotropia) is one of several possible complications of ocular traumatic injury. This condition is associated with a decreased quality of life. The purpose of this study is to present the functional outcomes of a series of 35 patients presenting with strabismus secondary to eye trauma. Methodology: Retrospective study. Treatments for each type of post-traumatic ocular lesion were categorized, which included conservative management by clinical observation; use of a lens with prismatic addition; intramuscular injection of botulinum toxin; or surgery. The strabismus conditions were evaluated prior to the treatment and six months after the last treatment had been received. The rate of therapeutic success, defined as ±10 PD (prism diopters) was assessed. Results: The orbital injuries that most commonly caused strabismus were found to be orbital fracture, penetrating eye injury and direct muscle trauma. All cases of direct muscle trauma received surgical treatment; 54% of orbital fractures resolved spontaneously during clinical observation, whereas 38% required surgery. Three cases of penetrating eye injury were observed and all were resolved surgically. The rate of therapeutic success was 88.57%. A single treatment was sufficient in 88.6% of all cases. Conclusions: Non-surgical therapeutic clinical observation is sufficient in a significant percentage of cases because a large number of patients tend to spontaneous recovery. Additional techniques, such as treatment with botulinum toxin, can play a useful complementary role. Surgical intervention, assessed on a case by case basis, also proved to be highly effective in the minority of cases where it was required.http://journals.sfu.ca/paao/index.php/journal/article/view/187DiplopiaStrabismusOcular traumatic injuryBotoxTrauma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luis Alberto Suazo
Paulina Liberman
Fuad George Gauro
Mario Tomas Zanolli
spellingShingle Luis Alberto Suazo
Paulina Liberman
Fuad George Gauro
Mario Tomas Zanolli
Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
Vision Pan-America
Diplopia
Strabismus
Ocular traumatic injury
Botox
Trauma
author_facet Luis Alberto Suazo
Paulina Liberman
Fuad George Gauro
Mario Tomas Zanolli
author_sort Luis Alberto Suazo
title Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
title_short Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
title_full Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
title_fullStr Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
title_full_unstemmed Therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in Chile
title_sort therapeutic outcomes in patients with post-traumatic strabismus from a tertiary center in chile
publisher Pan-American Association of Ophthalmology
series Vision Pan-America
issn 2219-4665
2219-4673
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Purpose: Strabismus (heterotropia) is one of several possible complications of ocular traumatic injury. This condition is associated with a decreased quality of life. The purpose of this study is to present the functional outcomes of a series of 35 patients presenting with strabismus secondary to eye trauma. Methodology: Retrospective study. Treatments for each type of post-traumatic ocular lesion were categorized, which included conservative management by clinical observation; use of a lens with prismatic addition; intramuscular injection of botulinum toxin; or surgery. The strabismus conditions were evaluated prior to the treatment and six months after the last treatment had been received. The rate of therapeutic success, defined as ±10 PD (prism diopters) was assessed. Results: The orbital injuries that most commonly caused strabismus were found to be orbital fracture, penetrating eye injury and direct muscle trauma. All cases of direct muscle trauma received surgical treatment; 54% of orbital fractures resolved spontaneously during clinical observation, whereas 38% required surgery. Three cases of penetrating eye injury were observed and all were resolved surgically. The rate of therapeutic success was 88.57%. A single treatment was sufficient in 88.6% of all cases. Conclusions: Non-surgical therapeutic clinical observation is sufficient in a significant percentage of cases because a large number of patients tend to spontaneous recovery. Additional techniques, such as treatment with botulinum toxin, can play a useful complementary role. Surgical intervention, assessed on a case by case basis, also proved to be highly effective in the minority of cases where it was required.
topic Diplopia
Strabismus
Ocular traumatic injury
Botox
Trauma
url http://journals.sfu.ca/paao/index.php/journal/article/view/187
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