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Unrecognized intraorbital wooden foreign bodyUnrecognized intraorbital wooden foreign body

Other Titles
Unrecognized intraorbital wooden foreign body
Authors
김영호김현석윤을식
Issue Date
2018
Publisher
대한두개안면성형외과학회
Keywords
Eye foreign bodies; Penetrating eye injury; Delayed diagnosis
Citation
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery, v.19, no.4, pp.300 - 303
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery
Volume
19
Number
4
Start Page
300
End Page
303
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/79112
DOI
10.7181/acfs.2018.02047
ISSN
2287-1152
Abstract
Intraorbital wooden foreign bodies may present difficulties in diagnosis due to their radiolucent nature. Delayed recognition and management can cause significant complications. We present a case report that demonstrates these problems and the sequela that can follow. A 56-year-old man presented with a 3-cm laceration in the right upper eyelid, sustained by a slipping accident. After computed tomography (CT) scanning and ophthalmology consultation, which revealed no fractures and suggested only pneumophthalmos, the wound was repaired by a plastic surgery resident. Ten days later, the patient’s eyelid displayed signs of infection including pus discharge. Antibiotics and revisional repair failed to solve the infection. Nearly 2 months after the initial repair, a CT scan revealed a large wooden fragment in the superomedial orbit. Surgical exploration successfully removed the foreign body and inflamed pocket, and the patient healed uneventfully. However, the prolonged intraorbital infection had caused irreversible damage to the superior rectus muscle, with upgaze diplopia persisting 1 year after surgery and only minimal muscle function remaining. We report this case to warn clinicians of the difficulties in early diagnosis of intraorbital wooden foreign bodies and the grave prognosis of delayed management.
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