Determinants of Visual Prognosis in Pediatric Ocular Trauma: Influence of Age and Injury Setting

Authors

  • Hassan Hashmi Optometrist, Superior University, Lahore. Email: hh0399693@gmail.com Author
  • Sana Shafique Clinical optometrist Institute, Superior University. Email: sanashafiq562@gmail.com Author
  • Ayesha Sajid Optometrist, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Superior University Lahore. Email: Sajid31ash@gmail.com Author
  • Ijaz Hussain BS, Optometry Optometrist at Rural Health Center Hujjan, Sargodha MS Rehabilitation Sciences, Superior university. Email: su91-msrsw-f23-058@superior.edu.pk Author
  • Mahnoor Akhtar MS rehabilitation sciences in clinical optometry. Email: su91-msrsw-f23-077@superior.edu.pk Author
  • Zaryab Khan Lecturer, The Superior University, Sargodha. Email: zaryabbakhar@gmail.com ORCID: 0009-0009-6772-1957 Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i3.704

Keywords:

Ocular, Trauma, Children

Abstract

 Background
Pediatric ocular trauma is a major cause of visual morbidity and is one of the preventable major
causes of blindness in childhood globally. It is responsible for about one-third of all eye injuries
seen in emergency rooms, with a high percentage seen in children under the age of 16. Worldwide,
ocular trauma represents 8–14% of the total childhood injuries and causes over half a million
blinding injuries annually, adding to the 1.6 million blind, 2.3 million visually impaired, and 19
million with unilateral visual impairment from eye injuries.
Aims
To find out Determinants of Visual Prognosis in Pediatric Ocular Trauma: Influence of Age and
Injury Setting
Methods
The present study was structured as a descriptive cross-sectional study at Bajwa Hospital Lahore,
over six months. 52 patients were recruited. Inclusion criteria consisted of children aged ≤16 years
presenting with ocular trauma of any nature (blunt, penetrating, chemical, or mechanical), without
any previous ocular disease that had an impact on vision. Exclusion criteria were patients with
congenital ocular pathology, history of previous ocular surgery, incomplete data, or those who
were lost to follow-up. Recruitment was accomplished via consecutive sampling, Data analysis
was conducted with the use of SPSS version 23.
Results
The results show LEFT (58.3%) occurred more frequently than RIGHT (41.7%). Males made up
58.3% of the data, while females were 41.7%. The location of events was evenly split among
HOME, STREET, and SCHOOL (25% each), with fewer occurrences on GROUND (16.7%) and
the least in OTHER PLACES (8.3%). OPEN GLOBE and CLOSED GLOBE were equally
represented (50% each). ZONE I, ZONE II, and ZONE III also had equal distributions (33.3%
each). For time duration, less than 2 hours accounted for 8.3%, less than 5 hours for 25%, and less
than 8 hours for 16.7% of the data.
Conclusion
Age and setting of injury are the major predictors of visual outcome in childhood ocular trauma
Based on the provided descriptive statistics for a cross-sectional study on pediatric ocular trauma.
The results suggest a greater incidence of ocular trauma in male children. 

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Published

2025-08-21