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Journal Article

Citation

Watts P, Obi E. Eye 2008; 22(12): 1514-1516.

Affiliation

Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, Wales, UK. patrick.watts@cardiffandvale.wales.nhs.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/eye.2008.224

PMID

18636080

Abstract

AIMS: To report the similarity of retinal findings in an infant who sustained an accidental head injury and an infant with non-accidental head trauma. METHODS: Two male infants sustained head injuries with skull fractures. Case 1 was an accidental head injury and case 2 was a non-accidental head injury. RESULTS: On examination, in case 1, there were four superficial retinal haemorrhages in the right fundus. The left eye had a haemorrhagic optic disc oedema with extensive retinal haemorrhages, retinal folds, and schitic cavities within the retina at the posterior pole. In case 2, the right fundus had a single blot haemorrhage at the posterior pole. The left fundus revealed optic disc haemorrhage and oedema with extensive retinal haemorrhages. There was a haemorrhagic retinoschisis with a retinal fold. CONCLUSIONS: The two cases, one with accidental and the other with non-accidental injury, demonstrate very similar ophthalmic findings. This supports the argument that there may be no retinal signs seen exclusively in non-accidental head injury.


Language: en

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