Overview & Types - Injury Spectrum
Ocular thermal and radiation injuries result from exposure to extreme temperatures or various forms of radiation, leading to a wide range of damage.
- Thermal Injuries:
- Flame burns: Direct contact with fire.
- Scald burns: Hot liquids/steam.
- Contact burns: Hot objects (e.g., curling irons, molten metal).
- Electrical burns: Passage of electrical current.
- Radiation Injuries:
- Ultraviolet (UV) Radiation: Photokeratitis (e.g., welder's flash, snow blindness).
- Infrared (IR) Radiation: Glassblower's cataract, retinal burns.
- Ionizing Radiation: (X-rays, gamma rays) Cataract, retinopathy, dry eye.
Injury Spectrum:
- Superficial: Conjunctival hyperemia, corneal epithelial defects.
- Moderate: Stromal edema, uveitis, partial-thickness scleral/corneal burns.
- Severe: Corneal opacification, full-thickness burns, globe perforation, retinal damage, cataract formation, phthisis bulbi.
⭐ UV radiation primarily affects the cornea and conjunctiva, causing photokeratitis, while IR radiation is more associated with cataract formation (glassblower's cataract).
Chemical Burns - Alkali & Acid Attack
- Alkali Burns: More severe (liquefactive necrosis, saponification). E.g., Lime ($Ca(OH)_2$ - common), $NaOH$, $NH_3$. Deeper penetration.
- Acid Burns: Generally less severe (coagulative necrosis). E.g., $H_2SO_4$, $HCl$. ⚠️ HF is an exception (acts like alkali).
- Prognosis: Limbal ischemia (key factor). Grading: Roper-Hall or Dua classification.
⭐ Alkali burns are more dangerous due to rapid penetration and saponification of cell membrane lipids.
- Management Principles:
- Immediate: Copious irrigation (water/RL/NS, ≥ 2L or 30 mins, target pH 7.0-7.4).
- Medical: Topical steroids (↓inflammation), cycloplegics (↓pain), antibiotics, topical citrate. Systemic: Vitamin C, Doxycycline (anti-collagenase).
- Surgical: Amniotic membrane transplant (AMT), limbal stem cell transplant (LSCT), keratoplasty.

True Thermal & UV Injuries - Heat & Light Zaps
- Thermal Burns (Heat): Direct tissue coagulation from flame/flash.
- Eyelids: Erythema, blisters, eschar. Late: ectropion, entropion.
- Cornea: Epithelial defects, stromal haze, potential perforation.
- Management: Immediate copious irrigation, topical antibiotics, cycloplegics, lubrication. Amniotic membrane for severe burns.

- UV Keratitis (Photokeratitis/Welder's Flash): UV-B absorption by corneal epithelium.
- Symptoms: Delayed onset (6-12 hrs), severe pain, photophobia, foreign body sensation, tearing.
- Signs: Conjunctival injection, diffuse punctate epithelial erosions (PEE) in interpalpebral zone.
- Management: Cycloplegics, topical NSAIDs, lubrication. Prophylactic antibiotics if large defect. Resolves 24-72 hrs.
⭐ UV keratitis classically presents with a 6-12 hour latency period after exposure, with diffuse punctate epithelial erosions on fluorescein staining.
IR & Ionizing Radiation - Deep Damage Rays
- Infrared (IR) Radiation (Longer Wavelengths):
- Sources: Molten glass/metal, intense sunlight.
- Mechanism: Thermal; deep tissue heating.
- Lens: True exfoliation of anterior capsule, "Glassblower's cataract" (PSC).
- Retina: Macular burns (solar retinopathy).
- Prevention: IR-protective eyewear.
- Ionizing Radiation (X-rays, Gamma rays):
- Sources: Radiotherapy, accidental exposure.
- Mechanism: DNA damage, free radicals; affects dividing cells.
- Lens: Most radiosensitive. Radiation cataract (PSC).
- Threshold: 2 Gy (single), 5 Gy (fractionated).
- Latency: Months to years.
- Retina: Radiation retinopathy (ischemia, neovascularization).
- Threshold: 30-35 Gy.
- Other: Dry eye, keratitis, optic neuropathy.
- Management: Shielding, dose fractionation, treat complications.
⭐ The lens is the most radiosensitive ocular structure to ionizing radiation; cataracts (PSC) can develop after 2 Gy.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- UV keratitis (photokeratitis): Severe pain, SPK after 6-12 hour latent period (welding, snow blindness).
- Infrared radiation (glassblowers): Classically causes true exfoliation of anterior lens capsule and heat-induced cataract.
- Ionizing radiation (radiotherapy): Can induce delayed radiation retinopathy, cataracts, and severe keratoconjunctivitis sicca (dry eye).
- Thermal eyelid burns: Frequently result in cicatricial ectropion or entropion, leading to exposure keratopathy.
- Corneal thermal burns: Cause immediate coagulative necrosis and opacification; prognosis depends on burn depth and area.
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