Patching for corneal
abrasion
Simple corneal abrasions do
not need to be treated by patching the eye, according to
a new review of studies that found patching initially
slows healing and does not reduce pain.
Although most
ophthalmologists no longer use eye patches for minor
corneal injuries, some general physicians and emergency
room physicians may still be doing so, according to Dr.
Angus Turner of the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
in East Melbourne, Australia.
"The abrasions on the eye
normally don't affect vision too much, so it is
pointless rendering a patient acutely monocular if there
is no good reason to do so," Turner said.
Turner and a colleague
evaluated results from 11 randomized controlled trials
of 1014 patients who had experienced a simple,
uninfected corneal abrasion. Some studies used
antibiotic drops and ointments in addition to patches.
The review appeared in The
Cochrane Library, published by The Cochrane
Collaboration, an international organization that
evaluates medical research. These reviews draw their
conclusions about best medical practices based on
evidence from several clinical studies on a given topic,
after the reviewers consider both the content and
quality of these studies.
Abrasions to the cornea,
the clear outer layer of the front of the eye, are among
the most common injuries to the eye. They generally heal
quickly, but are extremely painful. In the past, almost
all corneal abrasions were treated by putting a patch on
the eye for a day or two. The purpose of the patch was
to keep out infection and to keep the eye and lids still
to allow the cornea to heal.
But the Cochrane reviewers
found that patients who had been treated without
patching the eye had faster healing times on the first
day of treatment. These patients did not report any
significant differences in pain levels when compared to
patients who were patched. There were no significant
differences in healing or reports of pain two and three
days after treatment started.
"It is therefore reasonable
to conclude that patching the eye is not useful for the
treatment of simple, traumatic corneal abrasions," the
researchers say.
The idea of not patching
the eye with a corneal abrasion was studied as early as
the 1960s, Turner said, and no benefit to patching was
observed then. "But that did not seem to be noticed in
clinical practice."
"Over time, more trials
were completed, but still people in emergency
departments all around the world continued to use
patches when there was no evidence for their use,"
Turner said.
"We started moving away
from patching after corneal abrasions several years
ago," said Edward J. Holland, M.D., director of the
cornea service at the Cincinnati Eye Institute.
Ophthalmologists first stopped patching eyes that had
abrasions due to contact lens wear, because a patch
could hide signs of an infection, he said.
"Then we realized that
healing rate was no different in these patients,"
Holland said.
A properly applied eye
patch for a corneal abrasion is not comfortable, Holland
said, because a patch that can keep the eye still has to
be put on rather securely and tightly. He said that not
using patches allows more frequent use of antibacterial
drops to prevent infection and nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drops to control pain.
The review found that in
most studies using medications, patients who were
patched received medication for their eye before the
patch was put on and then not for 24 hours, when the
patch was removed to re-examine the eye. In these
studies, the patients who did not wear a patch received
drops or ointments several times over the same period.
Turner and his colleagues
are starting to organize of a study whether patching is
appropriate for larger abrasions (more than 10
millimeters square).