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Sports eye safety injury prevention Punjab
Eye Safety

Sports Eye Safety – Preventing Eye Injuries for Punjab Athletes and Sports Enthusiasts

30
May
2026
By Brar Eye Hospital · 8 min read · Eye Safety

Sports and Your Eyes: A Critical Safety Overview

Punjab is a state of passionate sportspeople — cricket on every village ground, kabaddi at the national level, hockey in tradition, wrestling (kushti) in akharas, and increasingly football and badminton in urban centres. Sports bring tremendous physical and mental health benefits — but sports-related eye injuries represent a significant and largely preventable public health problem.

In India, sports and recreational activities account for approximately 30–40% of all eye trauma cases presenting to ophthalmology hospitals. A blunt blow from a cricket ball, a finger in the eye during kabaddi, a shuttle smashing into an unprotected eye at badminton — each can cause injuries ranging from minor corneal abrasion to devastating retinal detachment, lens dislocation, or even rupture of the eyeball requiring enucleation (eye removal).

The most important fact: over 90% of sports eye injuries are preventable with appropriate protective eyewear. At Brar Eye Hospital, our emergency department manages sports eye injuries weekly — many of which could have been avoided with a simple, affordable piece of protective equipment.

90%
Sports Eye Injuries Preventable
40%
All Eye Trauma from Sports/Recreation
15–29
Age Group Most Affected
Higher Risk Without Eye Protection

Highest-Risk Sports for Eye Injuries in Punjab

Cricket – Punjab's Beloved High-Risk Sport

Cricket presents multiple eye injury mechanisms. A cricket ball travels at 100–145 km/h from a fast bowler — a direct hit to the eye at this speed can cause devastating blunt trauma: hyphema (blood in front of the eye), lens dislocation, vitreous haemorrhage, retinal tears, retinal detachment, and orbital fractures. Even a throw from the outfield or a deflected ball carries significant force. Batsmen, fielders in the slips cordon, and wicket keepers face the highest risk.

Protection: Cricket-specific polycarbonate face guards on helmets are mandatory for batsmen at professional levels and should be used at all levels. Wicket keepers should wear dedicated wicket keeping helmets with full face guard during net practice and matches. Fielders in dangerous close-in positions (silly mid-on, silly point) should use protective helmets.

Kabaddi – Punjab's National Sport

Punjab's cultural sport involves intense body contact — grabbing, tackling, and close-quarter physical struggle. Accidental finger-eye contact during raids and struggles is common, as is blunt facial trauma from elbows and knees. Kabaddi-related eye injuries include corneal abrasions, hyphema, and periorbital bruising that can mask more serious underlying injury.

Protection: While protective eyewear is less practical for kabaddi, players should be educated about immediately reporting any eye trauma — no matter how minor it seems — for professional evaluation. "It will get better on its own" is not appropriate for sports eye injuries.

Badminton

Badminton is particularly deceptive — it appears gentle but the shuttlecock travels at speeds exceeding 200 km/h in competitive play. The shuttlecock's diameter is smaller than the orbital rim, meaning it can bypass the protective bony orbit and strike the eyeball directly. Badminton causes a disproportionately high number of serious eye injuries relative to participation rates. A racquet swing from a partner in doubles play also poses significant risk.

Protection: Sports-specific polycarbonate eyewear (such as Rudy Project or Bolle sports glasses with certified impact resistance) should be worn by all regular badminton players. Standard prescription glasses or sunglasses provide inadequate protection and can shatter, worsening injury.

Hockey

Field hockey involves a hard ball and stick swings that can cause serious eye trauma. The modern game features aerial balls and lifted shots that directly threaten the face and eyes. Goalkeepers face the highest risk.

Protection: Full face cage helmets are mandatory for goalkeepers. Field players should consider protective eyewear, particularly in positions near the goal circle during penalty corners.

Wrestling (Kushti) and Martial Arts

Punjab's wrestling tradition involves close-contact grappling with high risk of facial and eye trauma from accidental contact. Thumb or finger injury to the orbit during grappling can cause serious damage including corneal lacerations and globe rupture.

Swimming

While less associated with acute trauma, swimming causes chemical eye irritation (from chlorine), fungal and bacterial infections from pool water, and particularly dangerous acanthamoeba corneal infection in contact lens wearers. Swimming with contact lenses — even for a single session — carries a risk of acanthamoeba keratitis that can cause permanent corneal scarring.

Shooting Sports

Competitive rifle, pistol, and clay pigeon shooting involve gunpowder blast, pellets, and wad debris that can cause severe penetrating eye injuries without appropriate eye protection. Ballistic-rated protective eyewear is mandatory for all shooting sports.

Types of Sports Eye Injuries

Blunt (Contusion) Injuries

Most common in ball sports. A direct blow compresses the eyeball, causing pressure waves that can damage multiple internal structures simultaneously:

Penetrating and Laceration Injuries

More serious and immediately obvious. Finger nails, sharp equipment edges, broken glasses, or high-velocity projectiles can penetrate the eye, causing open globe injury — a surgical emergency. Never remove any object penetrating the eye; cover gently with a protective shield and seek immediate surgical care.

Chemical Injuries

Sports-related chemical injury typically involves disinfectant sprays, athletic liniment, swimming pool chemicals, or insect repellent spray in the eyes. Management: immediate and continuous flushing with clean water for 15–30 minutes, then urgent ophthalmological evaluation.

Sports Protective Eyewear: What to Choose

Polycarbonate – The Sport Lens Material

Polycarbonate lenses are the universal standard for sports protective eyewear. They are 10× more impact resistant than standard plastic, lightweight, and inherently UV-blocking. Sports frames must have polycarbonate lenses and be themselves impact-rated (look for ASTM F803 certification for racquet sports).

Sports Frames

Sport-specific frames are designed to wrap around and protect the orbital area, stay secure during activity, and resist impact without shattering. They typically have rubber nose pads and temple grips. Wraparound styles provide the best coverage.

Standard Glasses Are NOT Protective

Standard prescription glasses and regular sunglasses are NOT sports eye protection. In many sports, regular glasses can worsen injury — the frame and lens can shatter or collapse inward under impact, causing additional corneal and periorbital lacerations. Athletes who wear prescription glasses should invest in prescription sports protective eyewear or use polycarbonate prescription inserts within sport goggle systems.

First Aid for Sports Eye Injuries

Frequently Asked Questions – Sports Eye Safety

My eye looks normal after getting hit by a cricket ball — do I still need to see a doctor?
Yes, absolutely. Many serious sports eye injuries — including retinal tears, vitreous haemorrhage, lens subluxation, and hyphema — are not visible externally and may produce no or minimal immediate symptoms. Internal damage can progress to vision-threatening complications if undetected and untreated. Any direct blow to the eye from a sports ball or equipment should be professionally evaluated within 24 hours, even if vision currently seems fine.
Can I play sports after LASIK or cataract surgery?
After LASIK or SMILE Pro, non-contact sports (running, cycling) can typically resume within 1 week. Contact sports and swimming require 4–6 weeks minimum. After cataract surgery with IOL implantation, light exercise resumes in 2 weeks, contact sports in 6–8 weeks. Your surgeon will give specific clearance timelines. After returning to sport, protective eyewear is strongly recommended, particularly for ball sports and combat sports, as the healed corneal flap (LASIK) or surgical wound can theoretically be disrupted by very severe trauma.
Are there special contact lenses for sports players?
Contact lenses can improve peripheral vision compared to glasses frames and are comfortable for many sports. Daily disposable soft lenses are generally safest for sports. However, contact lenses alone provide NO protection against impact — they must be combined with sports protective eyewear for high-risk sports. For swimming, contact lenses must not be worn — even daily disposables — due to infection risk.
Brar Eye Hospital

Brar Eye Hospital Medical Team

Emergency eye trauma care. NABH accredited. Bathinda & Kotkapura, Punjab.

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