A 32-year-old male with no significant past medical history presented to the emergency department (ED) from an outside hospital for further management of right eye pain and vision loss sustained after he was struck by a metal wire while at work. The patient presented to an outside “eye doctor” and was told to go to the nearest hospital for evaluation. At the outside hospital, he was given analgesia, antiemetics, and a tetanus booster, and transferred to our hospital for ophthalmologic evaluation. On arrival to our emergency department, the patient expressed continued eye pain with bloody discharge as well as blurry vision from his right eye. He had no other complaints and denied any other trauma or loss of consciousness during the event.
SAEM Clinical Images Series: What’s Coming Out of Your Eye?
2024-09-06T22:03:57-07:00
By: Vivek Medepalli, MD, Madeline Silverstein, MD, Katelyn Hagstrom, MD and Joshua Kern, MD |Editors: Jessica Hoglund, MD; Moises Gallegos, MD, MPH