Eye injuries in the US Armed Forces

Citation
Jjs. Lau et al., Eye injuries in the US Armed Forces, MILIT MED, 165(9), 2000, pp. 683-686
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
General & Internal Medicine
Journal title
MILITARY MEDICINE
ISSN journal
00264075 → ACNP
Volume
165
Issue
9
Year of publication
2000
Pages
683 - 686
Database
ISI
SICI code
0026-4075(200009)165:9<683:EIITUA>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Objective: To develop prevention and treatment modalities for eye injuries, ophthalmologists require epidemiological data on the various types of eye injuries. This study sought to define eye injury patterns in the U.S. armed forces. Method: Data on patterns of eye injury in the armed forces were ob tained through voluntary reporting by U.S. military ophthalmologists throug hout the world. The reporting format was standardized with the U.S. Eye Inj ury Registry initial and follow-up report forms. The data mere analyzed for significant injury patterns. Results: Data on 112 patients were submitted, representing a broad range of the military population. Data on a total of 96 patients with a 6-month follow-up were analyzed in this study. Immediate ly after injury, 43% of the patients were noted to have poor vision (worse than 20/200). After treatment, only 20% mere noted to have poor vision. Pat ients lost an average of 21.6 days of work after a severe eye injury. Concl usion: An eye injury is a traumatic and potentially debilitating event. The loss of visual acuity can be drastic, resulting in an extensive recovery p eriod.