Anatomy/Embryo of Orbit and Eye Flashcards
orbit intro
each orbit is shaped like a qaud. pyramid with base facing antero-laterally
- medial orbital walls are parallel to each other, lateral walls are perp. to each other
which bones contribute to bony orbit?
- frontal
- maxilla
- sphenoid
- lacrimal
- ethmoid
- palatine
- zygomatic
base:
orbital margin: frontal, zygomatic, maxilla bones
- provides protection
roof
frontal bone and some sphenoid bone
- has fossa for lacrimal gland
floor
maxilla
zygomatic
palatine
medial wall
ethomoid
lacrimal bone
maxilla
- lacrimal fossa; houses the medial portion of the lacrimal system
lateral wall
zygomatic
sphenoid
know the foramina that pass through here
page 1
blowout fractures
- fracture of orbital walls (usually inferior or medial)
- damage to floor: involves maxillary sinus; intraocular fat/bleeding can spread to maxillary sinus
- inferior rectus mm. often gets trapped; causing diplopia
- enopthalamos: movment of fat into surrounding spaces of msucle entrapment (sinking in of the eye)
- damage to medial wall: usually involves sphnoidal and ethmoidal air sinuses
- damage to roof can involve anterior cranial fossa
- globe can be damaged causing detached retina and bleeding
orbital tumors
malignant tumors originating in the sphenoidal and ethmoidal sinuses, middle cranial , and infratemporal fossa can erode through the thin walls of the orbit or pass directly through foramina.
- tumors compress the orbital contents
- can cause exopthalamos
what fascia lines the orbit?
periorbital fascia
- continuous with periosteal dura at optic canal and superior orbital fissure
- continuous with muscular fascias of eye muscles
what fascia surrounds the eyeball?
fascial sheath of eyeball - “Tenon’s Capsule” - thin membrane that is external to the sclera. Its continuous with muscular fascia of extraoc. eye mm. and separates eyeball from orbital fat.
orbital fat
provides cushion, lubrication and protection to the eye.
- during starvation the eyes become sunken in “enopthalmos” due to loss of this fat layer
palpebra
= “eyelids”
Five layer of the eyelid?
- skin
- loose CT
- muscle (orbicularis oculi and levator palpebrae superioris)
- Tarsal plate
- Palpebra conjunctiva
tarsal plate
dense ct for structural support of eyelid.
- orbital septum is fibrous membrane which connects tarsi to margins of orbit, contains orbital fat and helps limit spread of infections between face and orbit.
- medial palpebral ligament (connects tarsi to medial wall of orbit)
- lateral palpebral ligament
which glands are assocoiated with the eyelids?
- tarsal (Meibomian) glands (sebaceous glands)
- glands of zeis (smaller sebaveous glands)
- glands of moll (sweat glands)
- clinical correlation *
Meibomian cyst = chalazian = inflammation and obstruction of glands
hordeoum (cyst of eyelash glands)
orbicularis occuli
- sphincter mm. of eyelid
- CN VII
- ** CN VII impairement results in an eyelid that cannot close completely. inferior eyelid tends to fall away from eyeball and results in dryness and irritation of the cornea and sclera. (seen with Bell’s Palsy)
Levator Palpebrae superioris (LPS)
O: lesser wing of sphenoid
I: skin of superior eyelid
A: elevates superior eyelid
N: CN III
Note: superior portion of LPS attaches to superior tarsal plate and is sympathetically innfervated
Loss of CN III or sympathetic lesion?
Causes ptosis (inability to open upper eyelid) due to loss of LPS
Horner’s syndrome
loss of sympathetic innervation to head
- patient presents with ptosis due to loss of superior tarsal portion of LPS
conjunctiva of the eye?
- palpebral conjunctiva = epithelium of internal eye
- bulbar conjunctiva = outer epithelium of sclera
- conjunctival sac: area b/w palpebral and bulbar conjunctiva; opens at palpebral fissure
- conjunctival fornices: superior and inferior points are formed where bulbar and palpebral conjunctiva are continuous
what is the flow of tears?
lacrimal gland –> conjunctival sac –> surface of eye –> lacrimal papillae with puncta –> cannaliculae –> lacrimal sac –> nasolacrimal duct
lacrimal gland
a. Compound tubuloalveolar gland
b. Located in lacrimal fossa in superolateral orbit.
c. Secretes lacrimal fluid – watery, serous secretion – into conjunctival sac.
d. Lacrimal fluid keeps sclera and cornea moist and contains an antibacterial agent for protection.