Indian J Ophthalmol
October 2022
Purpose: To examine the incidence, clinical findings and management of pellet gun-related ocular injuries that occurred during protests in Kashmir region.
Methods: This retrospective study included records from 777 patients diagnosed with pellet gun-related ocular injuries admitted to a tertiary hospital in Srinagar, India, between July and November 2016. By reviewing the clinical records, the following data were collected: demographics, clinical information pertaining to the injury, imaging reports including computer tomography and ultrasonography B-scan, management in the emergency setting, and follow-up treatment.
Purpose: To determine the prognostic significance of various clinical features and surgical techniques concerning anatomical and visual outcomes in shotgun pellet-inflicted ocular trauma.
Methods: This prospective follow-up study was done at a tertiary care institute in Kashmir, India. Six hundred sixty-four eyes of 643 patients with firearm pellet-related ocular trauma were followed up for 6 months.
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine visual and anatomical outcome of perforating injuries due to shotgun pellet.
Methods: This was a prospective observational study carried out between July 2016 and Jan 2019 at a tertiary care referral center in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir. A total of 172 eyes with perforating injuries of 170 patients were included in the study and were followed up for 6 months with best-corrected visual acuity, slit-lamp examination for status of anterior chamber and lens, fundus examination for status of retina and media, intraocular pressure measurements, and OCT (optical coherence tomography) and FFA (fundus fluoresceine angiography) in selected cases.