Anatomy of the Orbit week 2 Flashcards
7 bones comprise the orbit and give it a pyramidal shape.
What bones form the roof, floor, medial, and lateral walls of the orbit?
The roof: is comprised mainly by the Frontal bone with a small contribution from the Sphenoid
The Medial wall: Maxilla, Lacrimal, Ethmoid, Sphenoid
The Floor: Maxilla (mainly), Zygomatic, and Palatine
The Lateral Wall: Zygomatic and Sphenoid
What is the relationship of the maxillary, frontal, and ethmoid sinuses to the orbit?
What is the name for the periosteum lining the bones of the orbit?
The maxillary sinus lies below the floor of the orbit, the frontal sinuses are superior and medial to the orbit, and the ethmoid air cells lie medial to the orbit.
The periosteum lining the bones of the bones that form the orbit is called periorbita.
Identify the indicated structures.
The _____ covers the posterior surface of the eyelid and reflects onto the outer surface of the sclera of the eyeball. When the eye is closed the ____ forms a sac anterior to the eye.
The Conjunctiva covers the posterior surface of the eyelid and reflects onto the outer surface of the sclera of the eyeball. When the eye is closed the conjunctiva forms a sac anterior to the eye (conjuctival sac).
What is the orbital septum?
What muscle does the orbital septum lie deep to?
What does the orbital septum attach to in the upper eyelid? In the lower eyelid?
The Orbital Septum is an extension of the periosteum in the upper and lower eyelid which lies deep to the orbicularis oculi.
It attaches to the tendon of levator palpebrae in the upper eyelid and the tarsus in the lower eyelid.
Identify the indicated anatomical structures.
What is the function of the superior and inferior tarsus (tarsal plates)?
What are they composed of?
How are they attached to the bone of the orbit?
What kind of glands are found within the tarsal plates? What is the purpose of this gland?
The superior and inferior tarsus provides support for each eyelid. Both are formed of dense connective tissue which is attached to the bone of the orbit medially and laterally by the palpebral ligaments.
Within the tarsal plates are modified sebaceous glands which empty onto the free margin of each eyelid, increasing the viscosity of tears.
What muscle is the superior tarsus assoicated with?
What kind of muscle is the superior tarsus muscle? What kind of innervation does it receive? (somatic, paraysmpathetic, sympathetic)
What does the superior tarsus muscle do?
The superior tarsus is associated with the levator palpebrae superioris.
In companion to the levator palpebrae superioris is a collection of smooth muscle fibers passing from the levator to the superior tarsus. This muscle, the superior tarsal muscle, is innervated by postganglionic sympathetic fibers. It helps to unconsciosly keep the eye open.
What nerve innervates the orbicularis occuli?
What nerve innervates the levator palpebrae superioris?
What is the function of each of these muscles?
What would be the result of loss of innervation to the orbicularis occuli, levator palpebrae superioris, or the superior tarsus muscles?
Motor Innervation to the Eyelid:
CN VII: Orbicularis Oculi (Closure)
CN III: Levator Palpebrae Superioris (Holds eyelid open)
Postganglionic Sympathetic Fibers: Superior Tarsal Muscle (Holds eyelid open)
Ptosis, or a drooping eyelid would result from loss of innervation to these muscles.
Where is the lacrimal gland found within the orbit?
Explain the release of lacrimal gland secretions into the eye.
What is the connection of the nose and the lacrimal gland?
The lacrimal gland is found in the superior lateral region of the orbit.
Numerous ducts empty secretions which are moved across the eyeball as the eyelids blink. Fluid accumulates and enters the lacrimal canaliculi which join together to enter the lacrimal sac posterior to the medial palpebral ligament.
A small part of the orbicularis oculi muscle, the lacrimal part, lies posterior to the lacrimal sac. When this muscle contracts during blinking, the lacrimal part compresses the lacrimal sac forcing fluid into the nasolacrimal duct which drains into the inferior meatus of the nasal cavity.
What nerve provides sensory innervation to the lacrimal gland?
Sensory neurons return from the lacrimal gland to the CNS via the lacrimal branch of V1 (Ophthalmic nerve).
Explain the sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation of the lacrimal gland.
Parasympathetic secretomotor fibers stimulate fluid secretion from this gland.
- The preganglionic fibers leave the CNS in CN VII, enter the greater petrosal nerve and continue as the nerve of the pterygoid canal.
- This nerve carries the preganglionic fibers to the pterygopalatine ganglion where they synapse on postganglionic neurons.
- The postganglionic fibers travel with the maxillary nerve (V2) and continue with its zygomatic branches and eventually reach the lacrimal gland via the zygomaticotemporal branch.
Sympathetic innervation follows a similar path:
- except the postganglionic fibers originate in the superior cervical ganglion, follow blood vessels to reach the head, and form the deep petrosal nerve prior to joining the nerve of the pterygoid canal.
- These sympathetic fibers then follow the parasympathetic fibers with the exception that they do not synapse in the pterygopalatine ganglion, but rather just pass through it.
Identify the muscles of the eye.
Identify the muscles of the eye.
State the movements of the eyeball.