Smartphone Fundus Photography in an Infant with Abusive Head Trauma.
10.3341/jkos.2017.58.11.1313
- Author:
Yong Hyun KIM
1
;
Shin Young CHOI
;
Ji Sook LEE
;
Soo Han YOON
;
Seung Ah CHUNG
Author Information
1. Department of Ophthalmology, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea. mingming8@naver.com
- Publication Type:Case Report
- Keywords:
Abusive head trauma;
Retinal hemorrhages;
Shaken baby syndrome;
Smartphone fundus photography
- MeSH:
Brain;
Brain Edema;
Consciousness;
Craniocerebral Trauma*;
Decompressive Craniectomy;
Diagnosis;
Emergencies;
Emergency Service, Hospital;
Epilepsy;
Hand;
Head*;
Hematoma, Subdural, Acute;
Hemorrhage;
Humans;
Infant*;
Lateral Ventricles;
Male;
Neurosurgeons;
Parents;
Photography*;
Retinal Hemorrhage;
Retinaldehyde;
Shaken Baby Syndrome;
Skull;
Smartphone*;
Wounds and Injuries
- From:Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society
2017;58(11):1313-1316
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
PURPOSE: To report fundus photography using a smartphone in an infant with abusive head trauma. CASE SUMMARY: An 8-month-old male infant presented to the emergency room with decreased consciousness and epileptic seizures that the parents attributed to a fall from a chair. He had no external wounds or fractures to the skull or elsewhere. However, computerized tomography of the brain revealed an acute subdural hematoma in the right cranial convexity and diffuse cerebral edema, leading to a midline shift to the left and effacement of the right lateral ventricle and basal cistern. The attending neurosurgeon promptly administered a decompressive craniectomy. Immediately after the emergency surgery, a fundus examination revealed numerous multi-layered retinal hemorrhages in the posterior pole extending to the periphery in each eye. He also had white retinal ridges with cherry hemorrhages in both eyes. We acquired retinal photographs using the native camera of a smartphone in video mode. The photographer held the smartphone with one hand, facing the patient's eye at 15–20 cm, and held a 20 diopter condensing lens at 5 cm from the eye in the other hand. Our documentation using a smartphone led to a diagnosis of abusive head trauma and to obtain the criminal's confession, because the findings were specific for repetitive acceleration-deceleration forces to an infant`s eye with a strong vitreoretinal attachment. CONCLUSIONS: This ophthalmic finding had a key role in the diagnosis of abusive head trauma. This case presented the diagnostic use of a smartphone for fundus photography in this important medicolegal case.