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Τρίτη 25 Ιουλίου 2017

Oculocardiac Reflex in an Orbital Fracture Without Entrapment

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Publication date: August 2017
Source:Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Volume 75, Issue 8
Author(s): Timothy C. Woernley, Thomas L. Wright, Duc N. Lam, Jonathon S. Jundt
Large orbital fractures in older patients are infrequently associated with an exaggerated oculocardiac reflex. This report describes the case of a patient in his 40s with a large right orbital floor and medial wall fracture without radiographic evidence of extraocular muscle compression or entrapment who developed severe nausea and bradycardia with movement of his affected eye. The patient exhibited bradycardia to 17 beats per minute during the initial examination and was taken urgently to the operating room for reconstruction of the right orbital floor and medial wall. Additional episodes of bradycardia intraoperatively were responsive to glycopyrrolate. After the procedure, the patient's pain was decreased, a normal range of motion was restored, and the bradycardia and nausea resolved. An explanation for induction of the oculocardiac reflex is considered in the absence of clinical or radiologic entrapment because large orbital fractures are not often considered to induce this reflex.



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