Orbital fracture
Background
- Types
- Blow-out Fracture
- Fracture of inferior or medial orbital walls w/o fx of orbital ridge
- Adipose tissue, inf rectus or inf oblique can entrap w/in maxillary or ethmoid sinus
- Non blow-out fx
- Lateral, inf, and sup orbital ridge fx typically occur w/ other facial fractures
- Blow-out Fracture
- Naso-orbito-ethmoid fx
- A/w force applied to nasal bridge
- Often accompanied by injury to lacrimal duct, dural tears, and TBI
Diagnosis
- Findings suggestive of orbital fx:
- Enophthalmos (globe herniation)
- Orbital rim step-off
- Crepitus
- Infraorbital anesthesia (orbital floor fx)
- Diplopia on upward gaze
- Entrapment of inf rectus or inf oblique or orbital fat
- Injury to oculomotor nerve
- Findings suggestive of naso-orbito-ethmoid fx
- Pain w/ eye movement
- Traumatic telecanthus
- Epiphora (tears spilling over lower lid)
- CSF leak
- Findings suggestive of ocular involvement:
- Retrobulbar hematoma or malignant orbital emphysema
- Exophthalmos, decreasing visual acuity, increased ocular pressure
- Orbital fissure syndrome
- Fx of orbit involving the sup. orbital fissure
- May result in injury to oculomotor and ophthalmic divisions of CN V
- Paralysis of extraocular motions, ptosis, periorbital anesthesia
- Fx of orbit involving the sup. orbital fissure
- Retrobulbar hematoma or malignant orbital emphysema
Imaging
- Obtain orbital CT as initial study in pts w/ sig clinical findings
- Evidence of fracture on exam
- Decreased extraocular mobility
- Decreased visual acuity
- Severe pain
- Unable to perform adequate exam
- Otherwise can obtain Waters' view first
Management
- Isolated orbital fx
- D/c home w/ amoxicillin-clavulanate, decongestants, instructions to avoid nose blowing
- Obtain f/u within 1-2wk for adults, shorter period for children
- Naso-orbito-ethmoid fx
- Admit
- Ocular injury
- Emergent ophtho consultation
- Malignant emphysema and/or retrobulbar hemmorhage
- Lateral canthotomy
- Extraocular Muscle Dysfunction
- May result in oculocardiac reflex -> vagal symptoms
- Consider release of entrapped muscle
- Decreased extraocular movement not due to entrapment
- Consider corticosteroids
- Surgical indications include greater tha 2mm enopthalmos and/or persistent diploplia
DDX
- Orbital Hematoma
- Proptosis, diffuse pain
- Globe Rupture
- Tear-shaped pupil
- Extrusion of intraocular content
- Orbital zygomatic fracture
- Most common
- Nasoethmoid fracture
- Damage to medial canthal ligament
- Damage to lacrimal duct
- Medial rectus entrapment
- Orbial Floor fracture
- Entrapment of inferior rectus
- Enophthalmos
- Damage to infraorbital nerve
- Retinal Detachment
- Hyphema
- Optic Nerve Sheath Hematoma
See Also
Source
Tintinalli's
