Krishnaiah Sannapaneni, Nirmalan Praveen K, Shamanna Bindiganavale R, Srinivas Marmamula, Rao Gullapalli N, Thomas Ravi
L. V. Prasad Eye Institute, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad, India.
Ophthalmology. 2006 Jul;113(7):1159-64. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2006.02.020.
To determine the prevalence of ocular trauma and proportion of blindness and visual impairment due to ocular trauma in a rural population of southern India.
Population-based cross-sectional epidemiological study.
A total of 7771 subjects of all ages, representative of the rural population of Andhra Pradesh.
The subjects underwent a detailed interview and comprehensive ocular evaluation as part of the population-based Andhra Pradesh Eye Disease Study.
An eye was considered to be blind due to trauma if best-corrected distance visual acuity was worse than 6/60 and the cause was attributed to ocular trauma.
A total of 824 (10.6%) subjects gave a history of ocular trauma in either eye, including 76 (1.0%) persons reporting trauma in both eyes. The overall age- and gender-adjusted prevalence of history of eye injury in this rural population was 7.5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 7.0%-8.1%). Men were more likely to have an eye injury than women (odds ratio [OR], 2.1 [95% CI, 1.8-2.5]). After adjusting for gender and other demographic factors, ocular trauma was significantly more frequent among laborers (OR, 1.5 [95% CI, 1.2-1.7]) when compared with other occupational groups. After adjusting for gender, injury with vegetable matter such as a thorn, branch of a tree, plant secretion, etc. (n = 373 [45.3%]) was the major cause of trauma reported in this population. The majority of the eye injuries occurred at the workplace (n = 461 [55.9%]), followed by home (n = 179 [21.7%]). The majority of those affected (n = 806 [97.8%]) did not wear any eye protection at the time of trauma. A significant proportion (n = 307 [43.1%]) of subjects who sought treatment for an eye injury went to an ophthalmologist. Trauma was responsible for unilateral blindness in 39 subjects, an age- and gender-adjusted prevalence of 0.6% (95% CI, 0.4%-0.8%).
Most ocular injuries in this rural population occurred at the workplace, suggesting the need to explore workplace strategies to minimize ocular trauma as a priority. Eye care programs targeting high-risk ocular trauma groups may need to consider ocular trauma as a priority in eye health awareness strategies to reduce blindness due to trauma.
确定印度南部农村人口眼外伤的患病率以及因眼外伤导致失明和视力损害的比例。
基于人群的横断面流行病学研究。
总共7771名各年龄段的受试者,代表安得拉邦的农村人口。
作为基于人群的安得拉邦眼病研究的一部分,受试者接受了详细访谈和全面的眼部评估。
如果最佳矫正远视力低于6/60且病因归因于眼外伤,则一只眼睛被认为因外伤而失明。
共有824名(10.6%)受试者有任何一只眼睛的眼外伤史,其中76名(1.0%)报告双眼受伤。该农村人口中经年龄和性别调整后的眼外伤史总体患病率为7.5%(95%置信区间[CI],7.0%-8.1%)。男性比女性更容易发生眼外伤(优势比[OR],2.1[95%CI,1.8-2.5])。在调整性别和其他人口统计学因素后,与其他职业群体相比,劳动者中的眼外伤明显更频繁(OR,1.5[95%CI,1.2-1.7])。在调整性别后,诸如刺、树枝、植物分泌物等植物性物质造成的损伤(n = 373[45.3%])是该人群报告的外伤的主要原因。大多数眼外伤发生在工作场所(n = 461[55.9%]),其次是在家中(n = 179[21.7%])。大多数受影响者(n = 806[97.8%])在受伤时未佩戴任何眼部防护用品。因眼外伤寻求治疗的受试者中有很大一部分(n = 307[43.1%])去看了眼科医生。外伤导致39名受试者单眼失明,经年龄和性别调整后的患病率为0.6%(95%CI,0.4%-0.8%)。
该农村人口中的大多数眼外伤发生在工作场所,这表明需要优先探索工作场所策略以尽量减少眼外伤。针对高风险眼外伤群体的眼保健项目可能需要在眼健康意识策略中将眼外伤作为优先事项,以减少因外伤导致的失明。