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Case: Anterior Segment Ocular Injury

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Alright, let's jump right in with our first case.

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And this was a trauma case.

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What I like to do when I'm looking at trauma cases of the orbits is to have

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the axial scan side by side with the soft tissue and the bone windows.

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So that way I can sort of glance from side

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to side looking initially for bone injury and then soft tissue injury.

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So let's start with scrolling through

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the left-hand side, which is the bone imaging.

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And as I scroll through the left hand

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side, I can recognize that there are no fractures on the axial scans.

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I'll confirm that on the coronal reconstructions.

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One of the good hints that there is

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absence of a fracture is the inability or the absence of seeing an air-fluid level

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in the maxillary antrum or in the ethmoid sinuses.

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Usually with a fracture, you will see blood products that are hyperdense on the soft

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tissue window seen in the maxillary antrum or orbital

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floor fractures and in the ethmoid sinus for lamina papyracea, medial orbital

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wall fractures, and those are the most common fractures to involve the orbit.

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In this case, we're not seeing that and looks like the walls are intact.

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Again, we will confirm that on the coronal imaging.

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So then we shift our focus to the right

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hand image, the right-hand image is our soft tissue image, and you notice that I am

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scrolling through the images that are the 0.75 millimeter thickness.

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So I believe in looking at the orbits

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with the thinnest section imaging rather than the reconstructed 3 millimeter which you see

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are series one and two on this particular case.

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So we're looking at the 0.75 millimeter thick soft tissue windows.

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And I like to start basically from the anterior and go posterior,

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from the superficial and go deep. On this anterior-most portion of the orbit, you can

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see that there is soft tissue thickening of the eyelid overlaying the globe itself.

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And as you can compare the right side

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to the left side, you'll see that there is thickening on the left side.

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Now, I would tell you that 90% of the time, when you're looking at orbital trauma, you

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will notice that it is the left eye that is traumatized.

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And you might ask, "Well, why is that?"

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Basically,

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when you're facing another person and you are a right-handed person,

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you punch the left eye of the person facing you, and so that's why left eyes are

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much more commonly traumatized than right eyes.

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For a right-handed person to swing across

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and hit the other person's right eye would require him crossing the nose.

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So sometimes you will see nasal bone fractures and right orbital trauma.

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But for fisticuffs, for altercations,

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you'll see that it's the left eye much more common than the right eye.

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When we look at the orbit,

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after looking at the skin surface and the soft tissue and the subcutaneous

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edema, that's seen in this patient who's got a shield overlying the affected eye.

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The next thing you will see is the surface

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of the globe with this little bright rim around it.

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And I'm going to use my little magic pen

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here and point out what I'm looking at is this superficial portion where there's

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a little white line that outlines the globe.

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That is the cornea and the sclero,

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the cornea overlying the lens and the sclero margin as you go out laterally.

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I look for discontinuity in that line,

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and that would imply a corneal abrasion or a laceration in the cornea.

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The next area to look at is the anterior chamber of the globe.

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The anterior chamber of the globe is

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that portion which is just in front of the lens.

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So here's our lens. And just in front of it is the anterior chamber of the globe.

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And it's between those two lines.

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If you see high density in the anterior

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chamber of the globe, it's called an anterior hyphema.

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An anterior hyphema is blood in the anterior chamber.

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So let's look at this patient, and we notice that there is this irregular soft

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tissue in the anterior chamber of the globe.

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I'm going to switch to a different section.

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So you notice that on multiple of these

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examples, that anterior chamber is not as well seen as on the right side.

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And that is because there are blood products in the anterior chamber.

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Not only is the anterior chamber hyperdense

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here, it's more shallow in depth than the contralateral right side.

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So I'm going to use my pen again and point this out.

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This is the anterior chamber right here, and the depth of it, as well as its

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irregularity, is different than that on the right side.

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That's because there has been anterior chamber rupture.

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So diminution in the AP diameter

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of the anterior chamber is one of the premier findings of globe rupture.

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Too often when we think of globe rupture, we're looking at the vitreous.

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This is the vitreous behind the lens.

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In this case, the vitreous is intact,

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but the anterior chamber has ruptured, and that's still a globe rupture.

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Now let's look at the lens of the eye.

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What you see with the lens of the eye

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on the normal side is a nice elliptical appearance to the lens.

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It's got nice borders and shape.

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If we look at the contralateral,

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the affected one, it is actually less dense and it has irregular borders to it.

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Let's look at that on multiple sections.

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So as we scroll,

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you notice that the anterior shape of the lens is much different on the right

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side and it just never has a good quality periphery to it.

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And that's because it has been ruptured.

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Not only has it been ruptured, but you can see that its angulation is off.

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So let's look at that. Nice lens in the center.

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This is our ciliary apparatus on either side.

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This lens is angled this way, not in the correct orientation.

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This is a patient whose lens has been dislocated.

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And that irregularity and loss of density that I mentioned is a traumatic cataract.

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Let me see if I can convince you

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that the density of this lens on the left globe is less than that on the right

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by changing the window and level until we can no longer see the left lens.

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So notice that the left lens is nearly

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completely gone compared to the right lens, which we can still see.

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That's because this has less density than the normal right lens.

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This lens that has lower density is typical of a traumatic cataract.

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So let's bring that back together. One more thing.

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We see this collection of air.

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So that's another indication that this might be a ruptured globe with air pocket.

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Sometimes we see air, as you see on the right side here,

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That is just under the eyelid as a normal variation.

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So it's kind of hard to tell.

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But when you have this constellation of loss of the integrity of the cornea,

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and the sclera, you have anterior chamber hyphema with anterior chamber rupture.

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You have dislocated traumatic cataract lens.

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Those findings, together with the eye,

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with the extra air here, are all likely on the basis of trauma.

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Notice that the vitreous is pretty much normal.

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There's this one little area here which buckles inward,

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which again is likely due to injury to the sclera and possibly the choroid

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behind the globe, which is our retrobulbar space.

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We see that the optic nerve and the retrobulbar fat is pristine.

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There is no injury to there.

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So this is all anterior segment injury.

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The one thing I will also recommend that you look at carefully is the little

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attachments of the lens to the lateral aspect of the globe.

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This is, as I said, the uveal tract with the ciliary body.

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When you see that that's obscured and you

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don't have those small little lines connecting the two,

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it's likely that the patient also has an injury to the uveal tract.

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So, a lot of stuff on this image,

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but it's basically all in the anterior most portion of the globe.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Trauma

Orbit

Neuroradiology

Head and Neck

Emergency

CT

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