BMJ UK BMJ Americas BMJ Brazil BMJ China BMJ India

Toy gun popular with kids can cause serious eye injury, warn doctors

  • BMJ
  • /
  • Newsroom
  • /
  • Toy gun popular with kids can cause serious eye injury, warn doctors

Toy gun popular with kids can cause serious eye injury, warn doctors

Use of protective eyewear should be strongly considered, they say

A toy gun that is popular with children can cause serious eye injuries, warn doctors in the journal BMJ Case Reports.

The warning comes after three people were presented to hospital on separate occasions with serious eye injury after being shot at by a Nerf gun.

All three were in pain and had blurred vision. And they all had internal bleeding in the eye (hyphema).

One of the three patients was a child, who had also developed swelling of the outer layer of the eye (cornea), and the inner layer of the eye (retina), from the force and speed of the bullet fired by the gun.

The patients were given eye drops, and when they went for their check-ups their sight had returned completely and the bleeding had stopped.

These types of injuries can have a serious impact, say the authors. A projectile travelling at high speed can cause irreversible vision loss*. Children should protect their eyes when playing with these guns, they advise.

“Sports in which the risk of [eye] trauma is relatively high, such as squash ball, have seen an introduction of protective eyewear in the UK,” write the authors.

“This case series emphasises the seriousness of [eye injury] from Nerf gun projectiles and calls into consideration the need for protective eyewear with their use,” they add.

One of the injured patients commented that the bullets, also known as darts, were generic versions and were harder than the branded versions. Parents may not be aware of this, say the authors.

The safe age limit for Nerf gun use in children may need to be reviewed, they suggest.

Notes for editors:
Article: Nerf gun eye injuries: traumatic hyphema doi:10.1136/bcr-2017-220967
Journal: BMJ Case Reports
*Explanation provided by authors; not in text