Cornea Layers Flashcards
5 layers of the cornea outer to inner
Epithelium, bowman’s, stroma, (dua is controversial) descemet’s, endothelial
Thickness of the cornea (central and peripheral)
Central: 530-550 micrometers (0.53-0.55mm)
Peripheral: 710 micrometers (0.71mm)
If the center is too thick, worry about fluid inside.
If too thin, glaucoma risk factor.
How thick is the epithelium centrally?
50 micrometers thick centrally. Thicker in the peripheral.
What cells is the epithelium composed of?
Limal stem cells- basal- wing (transitional)- surface (apical)
Limbal stem cells of the epithelium in the cornea
Stem cells in the limbus that will replace basal cells as they migrate up in the epithelium. Damage the limbus, these stem cells will not replace basal cells as readily and this will damage the epithelia, causing constant corneal abrasions and pain.
Basal cells of the cornea epithelium
Single layer of columnar cells. Only these cells undergo mitosis and migrate outwards into layers. As they move up, they are replaced by limbal stem cells.
They secrete collagen type 4, which makes the basement membrane. The basal cells are connected to the underlying connective tissue by hemidesmosomes (protein) and anchoring fibrils (collagen type 7)
Wing cells of the cornea epithelium
2-3 layers of cells. This is a transition zone.
Surface (apical) cells of the cornea epithelium
2 layers of SSNK cells. Microvilli are present at the apex of the surface to bind ricin and secrete glycocalyx (MUC1, 4, and 16).
Tight junctions join the lateral sides of adjacent cells to form a complete barrier, preventing fluid and molecules from passing between cels. Fluid and molecules must pass THRU cells.
Undergo desquamation and are replaced by wing cells every 7-10 days
How fast can corneal epithelium heal?
Replaced within 7-10 days. Fast.
Hemidesmosomes
Composed of proteins and connect a cell to connective tissue with the help of anchoring fibrils (collagen type 7)
How thick is Bowman’s layer?
8-14 micrometers thick
Characteristics of Bowman’s layer
Acellular.
Composed of interwoven collagen fibrils in ground substance.
Mainly collagen type 1, but also contains 3, 5, and 6.
It is secreted by the corneal epithelial cells before birth, and does not regenerate. It is the transition layer to the stroma.
Characteristics of the stroma
500 micrometers thick (makes up 90% of the corneal thickness)
Composed of connective tissue (keratocytes, ground substance, and collagen) with WBC’s dispersed throughout.
Keratocytes of the stroma of the cornea
Corneal fibroblasts that synthesize collagen and ground substance. They are flattened cells with extensive branching, and lie between or within layers of the collagen. There is a higher density of them in the anterior stroma than the posterior stroma.
Collagen within the stroma of the cornea
- Predominantly type 1. (Also contains type 3, 5, and 6.)
- Fibrils are perfectly straight and spaced.
- Diameter of 30nm.
- They form 200 to 300 lamellae that lie parallel to the corneal surface and each fibril within the lamellae course in the same direction.
- Each lamellae extends from limbus to limbus.
Anteriorly (1/3), lamellae are thin and branch and interweave. This allows for more cross linking and increased rigidity.
Posteriorly (2/3), lamellae are thicker with less branching and interweaving
Collagen type 5 serves to maintain the uniform diameter of type 1.
Type 6 stabilizes keratocytes found between collagen layers.