4- Ophthalmology (visual fields defects) Flashcards
Anatomy of the central visual pathway
Comprised of the:
- Optic nerve (CNII)
- Optic chiasm
- Optic tracts
- Optic radiations
- Visual cortex of the occipital lobe
visual fields
Relate to the peripheral vision (temporal and nasal). Each eye has it own set of visual fields.
- These overlap to form binocular vision.
Defects are names based on the area of
visual loss rather than the site of lesion
- Monocular blindness
- Bitemporal hemianopia
- Homonomous hemianopia
If we want to detect something in the temporal visual field….
light will travel through the pupil straight to the** nasal retinal fibres** (temporal visual field detected by nasal retinal fibres)
If we want to detect something in the nasal visual field…
light will travel through the pupil straight to the temporal retinal fibres (nasal visual field detected by temporal retinal fibres)
- The optic nerve (CN II)
- Split into diff divisions (different fibres of the retina)
- Temporal (lateral)- orange
- Nasal (medial)- green
- Also have up and down
- The optic chiasm
- Nasal fibres decussate
- Temporal fibres remain ipsilateral
Chiasm= where the crossover happens
- The optic tracts
- From optic chiasm to lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)
- Contains temporal fibres from the ipislateral side
- Contains nasal fibres from the contralateral side
- Optic radiations
- From LGN to primary visual cortex (x2 ) in the occipital lobe (x2 lobes)
2 routes to the occipital lobe
-
Superior route via the parietal (superior optic radiations)
- Continuation of superior quadrant fibres (temporal and nasal)
- ‘Baums loop’
2. Inferior routevia the temporal (inferior optic radiations)
- Continuation of inferior quadrant fibres (temporal and nasal)
- “meyes loop’
summary of optic tract
Visual field defects are due to pathology in the:
Optic nerve
- Monocular blindness
Optic chiasm
- Bitemporal hemianopia
Optic tract
- Homonymous hemianopia
Optic radiation
- Quadrantanopia
- Both affected: homonymous hemianopia due to stroke
Visual cortex
- Macula sparing stroke
Monocular blindness
- Temporal and nasal fibres on the ipsilateral side affected
- Therefore the nasal and temporal visual field are lost on the ipsilateral side
Bitemporal hemianopia
- Nasal fibres on both sides affected
- Temporal visual field loss on both sides
- ‘tunnel vision’
- Cause e.g. pituitary adenoma
Homonomous hemianopia
- Lesion of the optic tract on the right hand side
- Left nasal retinal fibres (contralateral) and right temporal retinal fibres (ipsilateral) affected
- Left temporal (contralateral) visual field lost and right nasal (ipsilateral) field loss
- ‘left homonomous hemianopia’- even though lesion is on the right- due to decussation
o Name the visual defect on visual loss not lesion
i.e. homo- loss of both left or loss of both right