Abstract

Purpose: To report a case in which vision improvement was achieved following surgery for anterior displacement of the eyeball resulting from self-mutilation in a patient with schizophrenia.Case summary: A 37-year-old female patient with schizophrenia was admitted following an attempt at self-mutilation, which led to anterior displacement of her right eyeball. Initial evaluation revealed that reduction was not feasible and visual acuity was finger count at 20 cm in the right eye. Orbital computed tomography indicated 26-mm anterior displacement of the eyeball from the center of the cornea to the interzygomatic line along with a small retrobulbar hemorrhage and edema in the superior rectus muscle. Surgical intervention, consisting of lateral canthotomy, cantholysis, and tarsorrhaphy, was performed for correction. The surgical site was reconstructed 6 days after surgery. A fundus examination conducted 1 month later revealed no abnormalities and best-corrected visual acuity improved to 20/20.Conclusions: Globe subluxation due to self-mutilation is a very rare and urgent condition in both ophthalmic and psychiatric contexts that requires immediate surgical intervention. This case demonstrates that immediate anatomical reduction when there is no direct suspicion of optic nerve damage can be beneficial for the recovery of visual acuity and may lead to a favorable prognosis.

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