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Abstract Purpose Orbital fractures are common injuries and represent an interesting chapter in maxillofacial surgery. This retrospective study analyses data collected from 528 patients surgically treated at the University Hospital “Magna Graecia”, Catanzaro, Italy, from 1st January 2007 to 31st January 2021. Methods The inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of orbital bone fracture, complete clinical and radiological records, and a minimum follow-up of 12 months. We analyzed gender, age, etiology, fracture type, treatment, timing of repair, and associated complications. Results The most frequent cause of trauma was road accidents (37.88%), followed by domestic accidents (25.95%). The manifestation of diplopia (72.35%), infraorbital nerve hypoesthesia (53.41%), extrinsic eye movement limitation (51.70%), and enophthalmos (41.29%), determined the indication for surgery. Our trauma team preferred the sub-eyelid approach (79.36%). The study shows a statistical significance in the correlation between the severity of the herniation of the lower rectus muscle and the presence of preoperative diplopia ( p -value = 0.00416); We found the same statistical significance for the post-postoperative diplopia ( p -value = 0.00385). Patients treated two weeks after the trauma show a higher rate of diplopia and a greater limitation of long-term post-operative eye movements than those treated within two weeks (diplopia 23.08% vs. 15.56%; eye movements limitation 13.33% vs. 7.69%). Early surgical treatment (> 14 days) reduces the likelihood of functional and structural damage to the lower rectus muscle. Conclusion Our data will support future maxillofacial traumatology studies, and the education and prevention measures taken will reduce the incidence of orbital trauma.
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Walter Colangeli
Magna Graecia University
Francesco Ferragina
Magna Graecia University
Elvis Kallaverja
Magna Graecia University
Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Magna Graecia University
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Colangeli et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e70edbb6db643587687d55 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10006-024-01236-z