Resident, Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Florida Health - Jacksonville, Jacksonville, FL.
Department Chair & Professor, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Florida Health - Jacksonville, Jacksonville, FL.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2021 Jul;79(7):1507-1513. doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2021.02.026. Epub 2021 Feb 23.
Previous retrospective studies demonstrate that urgent evaluation by an ophthalmologist for orbital fractures is not required in visually asymptomatic patients, although a consult is often seen as a necessity in many hospital institutions. To determine when an ophthalmology consult is indicated for a surgical patient, the oral and maxillofacial and ophthalmology departments at 1 institution collaborated for an evidence-based approach utilizing retrospective and prospective data.
The retrospective arm looked at patients from 2012 to 2017, who had an isolated, surgically repaired orbital fracture without preoperative ophthalmology consultation. A prospective arm was then created from August 2019 to July 2020 with a designed protocol that determined which patients required an ophthalmology consult preoperatively. Extra-ocular movements, visual acuity, and diplopia were examined in the preoperative and postoperative setting to determine if the lack of an ophthalmology consult adversely affected patient outcome.
Of the retrospective patients who met criteria, 82 of the 84 (98%) patients had a normal postoperative examination: baseline visual acuity, intact extra-ocular movement, and no diplopia. The 2 of the 84 (2%) patients had postoperative diplopia consistent with preop examination. In the prospective group, 10 of the 39 patients required a preop ophthalmology consult while 29 of 39 did not require one. A normal postoperative examination was present in 26 of the 29 patients (90%). Of those 3 remaining patients, 2 patients (7%) had postoperative diplopia consistent with preoperative while 1 patient (3%) had postoperative diplopia without preoperative diplopia.
The authors conclude that a routine ophthalmology consult is not warranted in visually asymptomatic patients with orbital fractures requiring surgical repair.
先前的回顾性研究表明,对于视觉无症状的患者,不需要由眼科医生紧急评估眶骨骨折,尽管在许多医院机构中,眼科会诊通常被视为必要。为了确定何时需要对手术患者进行眼科会诊,一个机构的口腔颌面和眼科部门合作,采用基于证据的方法,利用回顾性和前瞻性数据。
回顾性研究部分观察了 2012 年至 2017 年期间的患者,这些患者患有孤立性、手术修复的眶骨骨折,术前未进行眼科会诊。然后,从 2019 年 8 月至 2020 年 7 月创建了前瞻性研究部分,制定了一个设计方案,该方案确定了哪些患者需要术前进行眼科会诊。在术前和术后检查眼球运动、视力和复视,以确定缺乏眼科会诊是否对患者的结果产生不利影响。
在符合标准的回顾性患者中,84 例患者中的 82 例(98%)术后检查正常:基线视力、完整的眼球运动和无复视。84 例患者中的 2 例(2%)术后出现与术前检查一致的复视。在前瞻性研究组中,39 例患者中有 10 例需要术前眼科会诊,而 39 例患者中有 29 例不需要。29 例患者中有 26 例(90%)术后检查正常。在其余 3 例患者中,2 例(7%)患者术后出现与术前一致的复视,1 例(3%)患者术后出现复视,但术前无复视。
作者得出结论,对于需要手术修复的视觉无症状的眶骨骨折患者,常规眼科会诊是不必要的。