Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine (Mar 2017)

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

  • Dong Jin Yang,
  • Youn-Jung Kim,
  • Dong-Woo Seo,
  • Hyung-Joo Lee,
  • In-June Park,
  • Chang Hwan Sohn,
  • Jung Min Ryoo,
  • Jong Seung Lee,
  • Won Young Kim,
  • Kyoung Soo Lim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15441/ceem.16.153
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 32 – 37

Abstract

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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 (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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