Explosive eye injuries: characteristics, traumatic mechanisms, and prognostic factors for poor visual outcomes

Background Explosions can produce blast waves, high-speed medium, thermal radiation, and chemical spatter, leading to complex and compound eye injuries. However, few studies have comprehensively investigated the clinical features of different eye injury types or possible risk factors for poor prognosis. Methods We retrospectively reviewed all consecutive records of explosive eye injuries (1449 eyes in 1115 inpatients) in 14 tertiary referral hospitals in China over 12 years (between January 2008 and December 2019). Data on demographics, eye injury types, ocular findings, treatments, and factors affecting visual prognosis were extracted from a standardized database of eye injuries and statistically analyzed. Results Mechanical ocular trauma accounted for 94.00% of explosion-related eye injuries, among which intraocular foreign bodies (IOFBs) resulted in 55.17% of open globe injuries (OGIs) and contusion caused 60.22% of close globe injuries (CGIs). Proliferative vitreous retinopathy (PVR) was more common in perforating (47.06%) and IOFB (26.84%) than in penetrating (8.79%) injuries, and more common with laceration (24.25%) than rupture (9.22%, P < 0.01). However, no difference was observed between rupture and contusion. Ultimately, 9.59% of eyes were removed and the final vision was ≤ 4/200 in 45.82% of patients. Poor presenting vision [odds ratio (OR) = 5.789], full-thickness laceration of the eyeball ≥ 5 mm (OR = 3.665), vitreous hemorrhage (OR = 3.474), IOFB (OR = 3.510), non-mechanical eye injury (NMEI, OR = 2.622, P < 0.001), rupture (OR = 2.362), traumatic optic neuropathy (OR = 2.102), retinal detachment (RD, OR = 2.033), endophthalmitis (OR = 3.281, P < 0.01), contusion (OR = 1.679), ciliary body detachment (OR = 6.592), zone III OGI (OR = 1.940), and PVR (OR = 1.615, P < 0.05) were significant negative predictors for poor visual outcomes. Conclusions Explosion ocular trauma has complex mechanisms, with multiple eyes involved and poor prognosis. In lethal level I explosion injuries, eyeball rupture is a serious condition, whereas contusion is more likely to improve. In level II injuries, IOFBs are more harmful than penetrating injuries, and level IV represents burn-related eye injuries. PVR is more associated with penetrating mechanisms than with OGI. Identifying the risk predictors for visual prognosis can guide clinicians in the evaluation and treatment of ocular blast injuries. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40779-022-00438-4.

with dramatic power, producing instantaneous peeling, implosion, and hemodynamic effects, and pressure differences (called primary or level I explosion injuries); fragments with high kinetic energy (leading to secondary or level II injuries); huge airflow capable of overturning the human body (leading to level III injuries); and hyperthermic or high-pressure chemical reaction (leading to level IV injuries) [4,5,7]. The eyeball is extremely vulnerable to explosive injuries since it is an exposed and incompressible spherical organ full of liquid and rich in vascular networks, with fragile tissues and fine structures. Explosion-related eye injury can cause impaired visual acuity (VA) and even blindness [8]. Owing to the diversity and complexity of explosive injury mechanisms, the difficulty, and uncertainty of diagnosis and treatment are greatly increased in patients with ocular explosive injuries. Thus, identifying the mechanisms and classification of ocular blast injuries in detail is particularly important for timely and accurate treatment to minimize the visual disability rate. The present study was based on a multicenter review of inpatients who experienced explosive injuries. We thoroughly analyzed the mechanisms and classifications of explosion-related ocular injuries, compared the differences among various trauma categories, and assessed meaningful risk factors that affect the visual function outcomes.

Population
This retrospective study was conducted according to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the ethics committee of the Chinese PLA General Hospital (S2002-074-01). Consecutive medical records of all patients with explosive eye injuries who were admitted to 14 tertiary referral hospitals in China between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2019 were extracted and retrospectively reviewed. Each case was recorded using a standardized pre-formulated data sheet; the records were maintained in an eye injury database. Ultimately, 1449 eyes from 1115 patients with eye injuries caused by explosions were eligible for analysis.

Procedures
Detailed information regarding each eye that was injured from an explosion was collected using a standardized data sheet that included patient information (including age, gender, and occupation), a thorough history (including the cause of explosion and timing and nature of the injury), clinical presentation (including initial assessment of visual function following the explosion, if known), and treatments and outcomes (including the final assessment of visual function at discharge or at the end of the followup period). In addition, the mechanical globe injury zone and the wound length in the globe wall were recorded. Surgical findings and complete ophthalmological examination results were also retrieved for analysis. The VA data was either best-corrected or pinhole VA. The prognostic factors related to poor prognosis (final VA level) were analyzed. The population was further divided into six groups according to age: 1-6 years (pre-schoolers), 7-12 years (juveniles), 13-18 years (teenagers), 19-39 years (youth adults), 40-59 years (middle-aged adults) and ≥ 60 years (old adults). Individuals ≤ 18 years of age were categorized as adolescents and individuals > 18 years old as adults.

Definitions
Classification and definition of mechanical eye injury (MEI) were based on the Birmingham Eye Trauma Terminology (BETT) [9]. Open globe injury (OGI) was defined as a full-thickness wound of the eyeball including rupture (blunt force caused damage to the eyeball from the inside out), penetration (entrance wound only in the globe wall), intraocular foreign body (IOFB, retained foreign bodies in the eye) and perforation (simultaneous entrance and exit wounds in the globe wall). The latter three are collectively referred to as laceration (a sharp instrument causes damage to the eyeball from the outside in). Open globe mixture refers to the combined injury of rupture and IOFB or perforation. Close globe injury (CGI) includes those involving contusion (blunt force, although without global rupture), lamellar laceration, and superficial foreign body. Close globe mixture injuries refer to those involving combined contusion and lamellar laceration or superficial foreign body.
The globe injury zones were identified according to the Ocular Trauma Classification System (OTCS) [10]. The OGI zones (location of the full-thickness wound in the globe wall) were defined as within the cornea and the limbus, in the scleral area within 5 mm posterior to the corneoscleral limbus, and extending 5 mm beyond the limbus (zones I, II, and III, respectively). The CGI zones (involved eye tissues) were defined as the ocular surface (limited to bulbar conjunctiva, sclera, and cornea); anterior segment structures and pars plana ciliary; and intraocular structures behind the posterior capsule-lens interface (zones I, II, and III, respectively).
Non-mechanical eye injury (NMEI) included thermal, alkali, and acid burns of the eye. Chronic hypotony was defined as intraocular pressure (IOP) < 8 mmHg after at least 6 months of follow-up. Snellen VA was converted to fractional VA and grouped according to the Ocular Trauma Score (OTS) study group (1 through 5) [11]

Statistical analysis
All data were collected from an electronic database and crosschecked for errors. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS software version 26.0 (IBM, Corp., Armonk, NY, USA). Categorical variables were analyzed using the Chi-square test. Continuous variables were evaluated for normality, and means were compared using a two-tailed t-test. Further multiple logistic regression analysis was conducted to predict the independent factors affecting poor vision at the final assessment. P-values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

General conditions of the explosion
The top four categories of explosives causing eye injuries were fireworks or firecrackers (35.16%), mine gases (17.13%), detonators (11.93%), and containers (9.87%). The most common complication of systemic explosion damage was limb (13.90%) followed by craniocerebral injury (7.44%). Approximately 1.97% of inpatients were in a coma following the explosion (Additional file 1: Table S1).

Clinical features of injured eyes Eye injury types
As shown in Table 1, MEI accounted for the vast majority of injuries (94.00%), with simple NMEI accounting for 5.11% of all injuries and both types of mixed injuries present in 70 eyes (4.83%). The proportion of rupture among OGI (28.77%) was lower than that of contusion among CGI (60.22%), although both were generally caused by blunt force (χ 2 = 136.50, P < 0.01). The proportion of mixed injuries among OGI (0.98%) was also lower than that in CGI (25.39%; χ 2 = 184.30, P < 0.01). IOFB had the highest proportion among OGI (55.17%), while contusions were highest among CGI (60.22%).
NMEI types differed among mixed-injury cases complicated by MEI (χ 2 = 17.21, P < 0.01). In these cases, thermal burn combined with MEI occurred more commonly than alkali or acid burns. Figure 1 shows the distribution of the proportions of eye injury types according to age group (χ 2 = 29.67, P < 0.001). The absolute number of eyes among all three types of ocular trauma was the largest in the 19-39-year-old group. The proportions of CGI (61.29%) and NMEI (9.68%) were highest in the ≥ 60-year-old group; while that for OGI was highest in the 7-12-yearold group (60.13%). In addition, the OGI composition ratio was higher in patients aged 7-39 years (540/816, 66.18%) compared with that in patients aged < 7 years and ≥ 40 years (176/299, 58.86%; χ 2 = 5.09, P < 0.05).

Ocular findings
The ocular findings are shown in Table 2. Among ocular blast injuries, 20.57% were associated with eyelid damage, and the incidence of superficial foreign body injuries and IOFB injuries was as high as 31.61% and 27.54%, respectively. Explosion-related eye injuries resulted in high proportions of the anterior chamber (hyphema, 27.88%) and vitreous hemorrhage (VH, 40.10%); the most common tissue injury was traumatic cataract (47.48%). The proportions of other eye tissue injuries exceeding 10% included optic axis corneal opacity, iridodialysis, lens capsule breach, lens dislocation, retinal breaks, retinal detachment (RD), and proliferative vitreous retinopathy (PVR). Table 3 shows the differences in the proportions of traumatic cataracts, VH, RD, and PVR among different types of explosion-related ocular trauma. Traumatic cataracts, VH, RD, and PVR all occurred in significantly higher proportions in OGI compared with CGI (P < 0.01). Contusion had a much lower incidence of VH and RD compared with those of rupture (P < 0.01); no significant difference was observed in the incidence of traumatic cataracts or PVR (P > 0.05).

Fig. 1
Distribution of the number of injured eyes in each age group and comparison of constituent ratios of different types of ocular trauma among the age groups: the youth adults (19-39 years) having the highest number of traumatic eyes and OGI accounting for the highest proportion in the juveniles (7-12 years). CGI, OGI and NMEI within each age group. OGI open globe injury, CGI close globe injury, NMEI non-mechanical eye injury Furthermore, the occurrence of PVR was particularly noticeable in perforating (47.06%, 8/17) and IOFB (26.84%, 106/395) injuries compared with that of penetrating injuries (8.79%, 8/91; χ 2 = 18.09, P < 0.01), and was more commonly observed in laceration (24.25%, 122/503) than in ruptures (9.22%, 19/206; χ 2 = 20.73, P < 0.01). Among all types of OGI or laceration, the PVR incidence differed significantly (χ 2 = 43.24, P < 0.01; χ 2 = 18.09, P < 0.01). The presenting and final VA levels are summarized in Table 4. The final vision was ≤ 4/200 in 45.82% of patients (including NLP in 14.56%). The distribution of VA grading changed significantly (χ 2 = 278.31, P < 0.01). This comparison differed by injury type (Fig. 2). OGIs had the highest proportions of patients with poor VA (initial or final) (χ 2 = 138.31; χ 2 = 231.25, P < 0.001). The presenting and final VA levels in patients with NMEI were generally better than that in patients with OGI and CGI.

Clinical treatments
Overall, compared with the initial VA level, the final VA improved in 60.39% of eyes, remained unchanged in 34.24%, and deteriorated in 5.73%. Table 5 shows how different eye injury types compared in terms of poor VA, changes in VA, and enucleation rate. The proportions of patients with presenting and final VA levels ≤ 4/200 and enucleation rates were significantly higher in OGI than that in CGI and NMEI (χ 2 = 138.31, χ 2 = 231.25, and χ 2 = 108.29 respectively, P < 0.001). And the VA improvement rate was significantly lower in OGI than that in CGI and NMEI (χ 2 = 91.10, P < 0.001). The rupture was associated with lower VA improvement and reduction rates compared with laceration, although higher proportions of poor VA (presenting and final) and higher enucleation rates (χ 2 = 14.96, χ 2 = 10.38, χ 2 = 5.43, χ 2 = 9.41 and χ 2 = 39.41 respectively, P < 0.05). IOFB and perforating injuries were associated with higher proportions of poor VA (presenting and final) than that in penetrating injuries and lower VA improvement rates (χ 2 = 21.36, χ 2 = 34.71 and χ 2 = 10.42 respectively, P < 0.01). No significant difference was found in the final VA reduction (χ 2 = 1.94, P = 0.340) and enucleation rates (χ 2 = 4.92, P = 0.086) among the three types of laceration. Rupture   was associated with higher poor presenting and final VA and enucleation rates than that for contusion (χ 2 = 38.13, χ 2 = 112.41 and χ 2 = 148.11 respectively, P < 0.001), although significantly lower VA improvement and reduction rates (χ 2 = 58.68, and χ 2 = 18.43 respectively, P < 0.001).

Prognostic indicators for poor final VA
As shown in Table 6

Discussion
Explosions can result in various degrees of injuries distributed across a wide range due to different mechanisms initiated by the blast [1,7]. Generally, injuries caused by explosion involve significantly more binocular trauma (29.96% in the present study; 3.33-72.91% in previous reports [4-8, 12, 13]) compared with those related to ordinary causes (0-2.13%) [14][15][16][17]. The number of eyes involved seems to be related to the type and power of the explosives, for example, 3.33-16.32% for fireworkrelated injuries [6,12] and 72.91% for injuries related to explosive military ammunition [13]. This explosive difference also leads to different types of MEI. In this study, OGI (52.57%, 716/1362) was more common than CGI (47.43%, 646/1362). In previous studies, the OGI ratio (56.60-81.25%) was much higher than the CGI ratio (18.75-43.4%), some of which might be related to the fact that most of the explosives involved were bombs, weapons, and mines [2, 6-8, 12, 13]. Conversely, the proportion of CGI (64.50-67.34%) was higher than that of OGI (26.53-35.5%) in fireworks-related injuries [6,12]. In cases of ocular trauma derived from common causes, CGI was more frequent than OGI [14,18,19] with a few exceptions [20]. The causes and sites of explosion injuries, positional relationship between the injured and the explosives, differences in national or regional working conditions and living standards, and statistical range of eye injury (i.e., simple eye appendage injury or not) are possible reasons for the observed differences. Frimmel et al. [21] reported that chemical (45%) and thermal burns (26%) (level IV injuries) were far more common than MEI in fireworks-related eye injuries, probably because the majority of injuries in this study were eyelid and conjunctiva burns and did not involve the eyeball. The ocular trauma classification can be analyzed and interpreted based on the mechanism of explosive injury. Primary (level I) explosion injuries develop when the explosive shockwaves produce pressure differences followed by an implosion effect in the eyeball. The maximum IOP during an explosion can reach a peak of 0.29 MPa (2175 mmHg) at 1.63 ms, which is two times larger than the physiological IOP in healthy eyes [22]. Karimi et al. [23] suggested that IOP could reach as high as 15,000-17,000 mmHg if ground blast reinforcement effects were considered in their three-dimensional (3D) finite element model of ocular blast injury. Blunt force crushing the eye can lead to contusion (a type of CGI) followed by rupture (a type of OGI) of the eyeball when its pressure limit is exceeded. In our study, contusion and rupture accounted for 41.06% of all injured eyes and contusion was more common than rupture, similar to some literatures [5,14]; however, bomb explosions cause more ruptures than contusion injuries [7]. Other factors that influence the blast effect include the peak overpressure achieved, its duration, distance from the explosion, and whether the eyes were pointed towards the explosion or not. Secondary (level II) explosion injuries develop when fragments from the explosives or exogenous fragments pushed by the explosion tear the cornea or sclera (laceration of OGI, including IOFB, penetration and perforation), cut the eyeball surface and wall (lamellar laceration or superficial foreign body, types of CGI) or cause blunt contusion or rupture. Regarding action time, the speed of the primary blast wave was considerably higher and could reach the eyeball sooner than the debris driven by it. If the fragments reached the eyeball, the injury intensity was dramatically increased [24]. Therefore, level II explosion injuries are secondary to level I injuries in mechanism, order, or both. Moreover, level II explosion injuries cannot exist independently in theory and are considered compound injuries of different forms and degrees. In our study, IOFB (27.26%, 395/1449) was the most common type of eye injury, and other types accounted for only a small fraction. When specifically associated with war and weapons use, the proportion of IOFB among previous reports also differed (9.33-54.20%) [2,7,13,20,25], and its proportion in OGI was as high as 46.32-95.70% [13,26] (compared with 55.17% in our study). In ocular trauma from common causes, the proportion of IOFB (1.0-21.3%) was lower than that of explosive injuries [14,16,27]. In a grade III explosion injury, the human body is overturned by the explosion airflow or is hit by other objects. Our data were consistent with the classification for explosive injuries. Contusion, rupture, and IOFB were the injury types most closely associated with level I and level II explosion injuries. The ocular injury zone location according to OTCS (in which the eyeball tissues are divided according to repair ability and accessibility) is closely related to the prognosis of visual function. The ocular wall involved in the zone I can be repaired, whether the injury is an OGI or CGI. Because the cornea is a refractive medium, corneal damage affects VA, which can be improved by certain treatments, such as corneal transplantation. Zone II involves the iris, ciliary body tissue, and lens, which affect the pupil and IOP. Intraocular lenses can make up for the abnormal loss of function of the natural lens. The retina is the nerve layer responsible for eye visual perception and transmission, and is the key tissue involved in zone III injuries, which are difficult to repair. Low IOP caused by ciliary body injury and visual function damage caused by retinal injury are the most stubborn and difficult injuries to cure and improve. A poor prognosis is generally associated with zone III, followed by zones II and I [28]. In our study, the ranking of ratios of eyes injured by explosives was zone III > zone I > zone II among all cases of MEI; OGI zone I and CGI zone III were the most affected. Rupture and contusion were among the three most common types, and both generally involved zone III. However, the location of general eye injuries or CGI from general causes has been most often reported to be in zone I [3,19] or II [27,29], which is in contrast with our results. This comparison shows to some extent that explosion-related eye injuries predominantly involve the posterior segment (zone III) of the eye and are therefore more serious than general eye injuries from general causes. Meanwhile, it also shows that ruptures and contusions, are mainly caused by level I ocular explosion injury, and are the most important, non-negligible, and destructive types of blast trauma. A 3D fluid-structure interaction model of the human eye simulating the deformation of the eye components owing to primary blast injury showed that the amount of von Mises stresses (ability to resist deformation) on different ocular tissues was relevant to their mechanical and material properties. In terms of stress and strain, the eye components ranked from high to low were the sclera, ciliary body, cornea, lens, iris, retina, muscle, optic nerve, aqueous body, and vitreous body [30]. Although the optic nerve and retina (especially the macula) are located in zone III (the rearward segment of the eyeball), they are most likely disrupted by even a small stress of strain leading to blindness. Conversely, the lowest stresses on the vitreous and aqueous humor, the root of the incompressible sphere, indirectly lead to global wall rupture, and the stress is the highest on the sclera and lowest on the extraocular rectus muscles. Another computational eye-specific model also indicated that the highest stresses and strains were near the rectus muscle insertions into the sclera [31]. This finding is likely the root cause for rectus insertions into the sclera, which is the most vulnerable site of globe rupture.
In our study, traumatic cataracts, VH, RD, and PVR all occurred more in OGI than in CGI, which indicates that, regardless of whether the sharp objects directly penetrate the eyeball or rupture it indirectly, the global structural integrity destructions indicate that the local or overall intraocular tissues undergo more severe, extensive, and diverse types of damage. No statistically significant difference was observed in the proportion of traumatic cataract in contusions and ruptures, which supports that zone II (where the lens is located) is equally involved in both types of ocular trauma by blunt force. Tears of the eyeball wall along with the adjacent uveal vascular networks can inevitably lead to intraocular hemorrhage including VH which, then, was more common in rupture than contusion. Among contusion injuries, RD only developed when the blunt impact from the shockwave produced a strain in the retina high enough to exceed the specified threshold for RD [32]. Obviously, rupture can directly cause retinal/choroidal break, and the retina also can be pulled away by the lost or prolapsed vitreous body or vacuumed out because of the significant loss of intraocular contents and pressure. While no difference was observed in the proportion of PVR between contusions and ruptures, PVR was significantly more common in lacerations (especially perforating and IOFB injuries) than in ruptures. Therefore, we propose a bold hypothesis: the probability of PVR caused by blunt force is not necessarily related to whether the eyeball is broken or not, and the mechanism of the foreign object penetrating the eyeball significantly promotes the PVR occurrence and development.
At the final follow-up, 9.59% of eyes had been removed following explosive injuries in our study. In previous reports, this percentage was only 0.61-10.00% for general or firework-related eye injuries [4-6, 12, 21, 28, 33-36], although it was as high as 11.90-34.46% for injuries caused in war or by bomb or mine blasts [2,8,13,26,37,38]. The NLP in our study was 13.32% for the presenting VA and 14.56% for the final VA, which was significantly lower than the values provided in previous reports (initial NLP range 18.7-53.1%) [3,4,7,8,13,28,37] or the final NLP in 14.04-39.00% [3,4,8,12,28,36,37] of injuries related to firecrackers, bomb or mine explosions, war or weapon use, or OGI. This difference is probably related to the fact that our study included data for various causes of explosive injuries and types of eye injuries from mild to heavy, whereas Feng et al. [36] reported exclusively on eyes with severe explosive injuries that required vitrectomy. Additionally, the high proportion of low VA observed in our study   [3,5,6,26,37] (60.39% in ours). OGIs were often associated with worse visual prognosis in relation to highly lethal explosives, which is consistent with our comparison of presenting and final VA levels among injury types. And when compared with CGI, the proportion of patients with a final VA < 0.1 was higher [3] and the mean VA was lower [13]. We further compared the classification of different ocular trauma mechanisms based on the proportions of patients with VA levels ≤ 4/200, VA reduction and enucleation rates, and inferred the following. (1) In OGI, the percentages of low VA levels and enucleation rates for ruptures caused by blunt force trauma are higher than those for lacerations caused by sharp objects, although the percentage of VA change or improvement after treatment is smaller among ruptures. Briefly, the harm caused by ruptures is greater than that caused by laceration and yet VA differentiation in some laceration cases is poor and not optimistic. (2) Among the three types of laceration by sharp objects, IOFB and perforating injuries can cause in a higher proportion of patients with low vision and a lower proportion of patients with VA improvement compared with penetrating injuries; however, the three types do not differ in final VA reduction and enucleation rates. (3) Rupture as a type of OGI and contusion as a type of CGI are both caused by blunt force. The proportion of patients with low vision and the enucleation rate after a rupture injury is higher, and the final VA changes (whether improvement or reduction) is lower. All these prove once again that a contusion occurs before the eyeball is subjected to instantaneous shock and compression of the blunt force beyond the threshold that the eyeball wall can withstand, and once this threshold is exceeded, a rupture injury occurs. Based on the results of this study, recovery from a high-severity of globe rupture with extensive ocular tissue damage is difficult. Few studies have compared visual function and prognosis of ocular trauma according to the injury mechanism. However, based on our analysis, determining the mechanism of injury and accurately classifying the ocular trauma contributes to the prioritization of ocular trauma treatment, injury evaluation, and outcome prediction.
As far as predictors of poor final VA, initial VA is generally acknowledged as a key factor that affects final vision status [3,14,28,[39][40][41][42], which is consistent with our results. To some extent, initial VA after ocular trauma reflects the severity of intraocular tissue damage in most eye injuries. In terms of eye injury type, IOFB (mainly associated to level II explosion injury), rupture, contusion (resulting from level I injuries) and NMEI (level IV injuries) were independent risk factors for poor vision. Indeed, these findings make it evident that explosion injuries cause great harm to eyeballs. The rupture severity discussed above is an important risk factor of poor vision, which is supported by the literature [5,26,38,41]. Contusion, although not a scoring factor for low vision in OTS (a simplified predictive tool for ocular trauma) [42], showed significance in this study probably owing to the inclusion of explosion injuries, and zone III (posterior segment) accounting for the vast majority of injuries (75.32%). Indeed, injuries located in zone III were recognized as an independent risk factor for low vision in this study and many others [4,38,41]. Consistent with our results, full-thickness laceration of the eyeball ≥ 5 mm (or larger wounds) [26,40,42], VH [19,40,41], RD [3,5,40,41], TON [5], endophthalmitis [39,42] and PVR [36] were identified as risks factors for poor VA in some previous analyses. Regarding eye structure and function, damage that involves the posterior segment is not easily repaired. Involvement of the retina or choroid was revealed as predictive factor of poor VA in previous reports [5,18,27,36]. Few studies have been conducted on ciliary body detachment (CBD), as most case analyses do not include this observation. In addition to initial VA, rupture, endophthalmitis and RD, the OTS includes perforation and relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD) [11]. Because of the small number of perforating cases, few effective statistical analyses can be conducted, which may be the reason it has not been identified as an independent risk factor in many studies, including ours. In certain instances, especially of OGI, RAPD cannot be examined, evaluated and recorded after injury, and therefore was not included in this study. The OTS has general significance as a reference for the evaluation of visual function after ocular trauma, although the particularities of explosive ocular injury should be considered due to its special characteristics compared with conventional eye injuries. The predictive value of these risk factors is useful for patients counseling as well as managing expectations and guiding clinical decisions.