Abstract

The features of the clinical course, symptoms and the difficulty of diagnosing traumatic injuries of the eye, orbit and optic nerve are described. A total of 952 patients with concomitant craniocerebral injuries and injuries to the eye, orbit, optic nerve were studied in 2018. The possibilities of computer tomography in the diagnosis of traumatic injuries of the visual tract combined with traumatic brain injury and differential diagnosis of intracranial injuries of the visual tract before the hospital and hospital stages were studied. In the structure of craniocerebral trauma, craniofacial accounted for 187 (19.6%), of which 118 (6%) eye injuries, 20 (10.6%) orbit injuries, 4 (2.1%) optic nerve injuries, 19 (10 %) of patients were diagnosed with a fracture of the walls of the orbit. In 5 (2.6%) patients, an isolated fracture of the lower orbital wall was revealed. Total: 158 men (84.4%), 29 women (15.5%). The patients underwent examination, including examination by a multidisciplinary team (neurosurgeon, maxillofacial surgeon, ENT and ophthalmologist). Anamnesis was studied in all patients, a comprehensive ophthalmological examination was performed: visometry (with optimal correction), refractometry, biomicroscopy, ophthalmoscopy and neuro-ophthalmological examination. All patients underwent radiography of the orbits and skull in frontal and lateral projections, CT, MRI of the brain and orbits. To obtain additional information, 24 (12.8%) patients underwent a two-dimensional ultrasound examination - ultrasound - B SCAN of the eyeball, extraocular muscles and retrobulbar space. Timely topical diagnostics and qualified reconstructive surgeries performed in the early period of craniofacial trauma allows achieving regression of oculomotor disorders in 86.6%, prevents severe consequences and preserves the patient's vision.

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