1.Chopstick splinter: A rare cause of bilateral frozen orbits
Bin Lieh O. ; Ong Lee C. ; Tet Min C. ; Raja Selva V. ; Liza-Sharmini AT ; Balaravi P. ; Singh Gurdeep M.
Philippine Journal of Ophthalmology 2006;31(1):42-43
OBJECTIVE: To report an unusual case of frozen orbit caused by an unsuspected intraorbital foreign body.
METHOD: This is a case report.
RESULTS: A 31-year old Chinese man presented with a 6-month history of painless progressive right caruncular growth with mucoid discharge. He also had bilateral progressive reduction in ocular movements. His best-corrected vision was 6/9 bilaterally. A conjunctival granuloma arising from the right caruncle and extending to the cornea and associate with ophthalmoplegia was also present. Orbital computed tomography showed a dense rod-like structure traversing the nasal area, extending from the superomedial wall of the right orbit to the apex of the left orbit with surrounding inflammatory reaction but sparing the optic nerve. The intraorbital foreign body, a 6 cm chopstick splinter, was successfully removed via right lateral rhinotomy.
CONCLUSION: Intraorbital foreign bodies are not uncommonly seen and, generally, the diagnosis is straightforward. Nevertheless, diagnosis, could be missed if it is not suspected.
Human
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Male
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Adult
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WOUNDS AND INJURIES
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EYE FOREIGN BODIES
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EYE DISEASES
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2.Effect of dentin roughening and type of composite material on the restoration of non-carious cervical lesions: an in vivo study with 18 months of follow-up
Sanjana VERMA ; Rakesh SINGLA ; Gurdeep Singh GILL ; Namita JAIN
Restorative Dentistry & Endodontics 2023;48(4):e35-
Objectives:
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of dentin roughening and the type of composite resin used (either bulk-fill flowable or nanohybrid) on the restoration of non-carious cervical lesions (NCCLs) with an 18-month follow-up period.
Materials and Methods:
This prospective split-mouth study included 36 patients, each with a minimum of 4 NCCLs. For each patient, 4 types of restorations were performed: unroughened dentin with nanohybrid composite, unroughened dentin with bulk-fill flowable composite, roughened dentin with nanohybrid composite, and roughened dentin with bulk-fill flowable composite. A universal bonding agent (Tetric N Bond Universal) was applied in self-etch mode for all groups. The restorations were subsequently evaluated at 6, 12, and 18 months in accordance with the criteria set by the FDI World Dental Federation. Inferential statistics were computed using the Friedman test, with the level of statistical significance established at 0.05.
Results:
The 4 groups exhibited no significant differences in relation to fracture and retention, marginal staining, marginal adaptation, postoperative hypersensitivity, or the recurrence of caries at any follow-up point.
Conclusions
Within the limitations of the present study, over an 18-month follow-up period, no significant difference was present in the clinical performance of bulk-fill flowable and nanohybrid composite restorations of non-carious cervical lesions. This held true regardless of whether dentin roughening was performed.
3.Multivariate analysis of childhood microbial keratitis in South India.
Gurdeep SINGH ; Manikandan PALANISAMY ; Bhaskar MADHAVAN ; Revathi RAJARAMAN ; Kalpana NARENDRAN ; Avneesh KOUR ; Narendran VENKATAPATHY
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2006;35(3):185-189
INTRODUCTIONCorneal infection is the most common cause of profound ocular morbidity leading to blindness worldwide. Corneal infection in children is difficult to diagnose and treat, as they are unwilling and sometimes unable to cooperate during active management. This study analyses the prevalence, microbiology, demography, therapeutic and visual outcome of infectious microbial keratitis in the paediatric age group seen at a tertiary eye care hospital in south India.
MATERIALS AND METHODSA retrospective review of all cases presenting with keratitis to the ocular microbiology and cornea service at Aravind Eye Hospital, Coimbatore, from February 1997 to January 2004, was done to screen the patients for microbial keratitis. Their records were further analysed for clinical and microbiological details. Cases with culture-proven non-viral keratitis in children RESULTSOf the 310 patients who attended the cornea clinic, 97 (31.2%) patients were confirmed to be positive for microbial keratitis. 54.6% of cases were male. The most common predisposing cause of ulceration was trauma (69%) with organic matter. Pure bacterial cultures were obtained from 64 (65.9%) eyes, whereas pure fungal cultures were obtained from 37 (38.1%) eyes. Four (4.1%) eyes showed mixed growth. CONCLUSIONThe most commonly isolated organism was Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The most common predisposing cause of infectious microbial keratitis was corneal trauma. Early stage of diagnosis and formulation of an uncompromising management protocol can prevent profound visual morbidity.
Adolescent
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Eye Infections, Bacterial
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diagnosis
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therapy
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transmission
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Eye Infections, Fungal
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
transmission
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Female
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Humans
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India
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Infant
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Keratitis
;
diagnosis
;
etiology
;
microbiology
;
therapy
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Male