Birmingham
Eye Trauma Terminology System (BETTS)
This
comprehensive, standardized system of eye trauma
terms,should
be utilized when reporting to USEIR.
|
 |
| Endorsed by the: |
Mandated by: |
| • American
Academy of Ophthalmology |
• Graefe’s
Archives |
| • International
Society of Ocular Trauma |
• Klinische
Monatsblätter |
| • Retina
Society |
• Ophthalmology |
| • United
States Eye Injury Registry |
|
| • Vitreous
Society |
|
| • World
Eye Injury Registry |
|

|
BETTS
Glossary of Terms
|
Term |
Definition and explanation |
| Eyewall |
Sclera
and cornea.
| Though
technically the eyewall has three coats posterior to
the limbus, for clinical and practical purposes
violation of only the most external structure is taken
into consideration |
|
| Closed
globe injury |
No
full- thickness wound of eyewall. |
| Open
globe injury |
Full-
thickness wound of the eyewall. |
| Contusion |
There
is no (full- thickness) wound.
| The
injury is either due to direct energy delivery by the
object (e. g., choroidal rupture) or to the changes
in the shape of the globe (e. g., angle recession) |
|
| Lamellar
laceration |
Partial-
thickness wound of the eyewall. |
| Rupture |
Full-
thickness wound of the eyewall, caused by a blunt object.
| Since
the eye is filled with incompressible liquid, the impact
results in momentary increase of the IOP. The
eyewall yields at its weakest point (at the impact
site or elsewhere; example: an old cataract wound
dehisces even though the impact occurred elsewhere);
the actual wound is produced by an inside- out
mechanism |
|
| Laceration |
Full-
thickness wound of the eyewall, caused by a sharp object.
| The
wound occurs at the impact site by an outside- in mechanism |
|
| Penetrating
injury |
Entrance
wound.
| If
more than one wound is present, each must have
been caused by a different agent |
|
| Retained
foreign object/ s. |
| Technically
a penetrating injury, but grouped separately
because of different clinical implications |
|
|
| Perforating
injury |
Entrance and exit
wounds.
| Both
wounds caused by the same agent |
|
*Some injuries
remain difficult to classify. For instance, an intravitreal BB pellet
is technically an IOFB injury. However, since this is a blunt object
that requires a huge impact force if they enter, not just contuse,
the eye, there is an element of rupture involved. In such situations,
the ophthalmologist should either describe the injury as "mixed" (i.
e., rupture with an IOFB) or select the most serious type of the
mechanisms involved.
Discussion
Worldwide
interest in ocular trauma is rapidly growing as increasingly effective
techniques for
prevention and treatment are developed. Professional associations (International
Society of Ocular Trauma,
United States Eye Injury Registry) have been formed to promote research and
disseminate its results.
Unfortunately, the lack of an unambiguous common language remains a major limiting
factor in effectively
sharing eye injury information: varying responses are given to simple questions
such as What
is the distinction between laceration, rupture, penetration, and perforation?
Is a full- thickness scleral wound without obvious choroidal and retinal involvement
an open globe injury? If a foreign body has traversed the eye and lodged in
the orbit, is it perforating? double perforating? double penetrating? ).
Despite
these ambiguities, whether publishing in a peer- review journal or
discussing patient referral over
the telephone, ophthalmologists continue to use certain ocular trauma terms,
rather than lengthy descriptions, to characterize the eye’s condition. Our
colleagues‘ definition and understanding of these terms are assumed
identical to ours with each term having a definition which is unambiguous and
independent of such variables as time, individuality, geographical location,
and place of training. It is also commonly assumed that a one- to- one relationship
between condition and term exists: there is no condition which can alternatively
be described by more than a single term, and there is no term characterizing
more than a single clinical condition. Unfortunately, our review of scientific
journals and reference books proved these assumptions to be incorrect.
Without a standardized
terminology of eye injury types, it is impossible to design projects
like the United
States Eye Injury Registry (USEIR) or the World Eye Injury Registry (WEIR);
clinical trials in the field of ocular trauma cannot be planned; and the communication
between ophthalmologists remains ambiguous. A
standardized terminology for eye injury has been developed based on extensive
experience. It has then
undergone repeated reviews by international ophthalmic audiences, incorporating
suggestions from
respondents in 13 countries and selected ocular trauma experts. By always using
the entire globe as the tissue of reference, classification is unambiguous,
consistent, and simple. It provides definitions for the commonly used eye trauma
terms within the framework of a comprehensive system.
BETTS
BETTS satisfies
all criteria by:
• providing a clear
definition for all injury types (Table 1) and
• placing each
injury type within the framework of a comprehensive system (Fig.
1). The key to BETTS’ logic is to understand that all terms relate
to the whole eyeball as the tissue of reference . While in BETTS,
a " penetrating corneal injury " is unambiguously
an open globe injury with a corneal wound, the same term had
two potential meanings before:
• an injury penetrating
into the cornea (i. e., a partial- thickness corneal wound: a closed
globe injury) or
• an injury penetrating
into the globe (i. e., a full- thickness corneal wound: an open globe
injury).