Eye and Orbit Flashcards
what is the Orbit and what are its structure and function
the orbit is a boney cavity of the skeleton, it contains
- Eyeball and muscles
- Nerves
- Blood vessels
- Most lacrimal apparatus
The main function is to protect these structures
where is the apex of the orbit?
found at the optic canal, in the lesser wing of the sphenoid, just medial to SOF.
How many layers does the eyeball consist of?
The eyeball has three separate layers
- Outer fibrous layer ( sclera and cornea)
- Middle vascular layer ( Choroid, ciliary body and iris )
- Inner layer ( Retina, optic and non-visual parts)
Structure and function of the outer fibrous layer
Sclera
- Opaque part of the fibrous coat of the eyeball, often referred to as the “whites of the eyes”.
- Consists 5/6 of the posterior eye
Cornea
-Transparnt part of the fibrous coat
Covers the anterior 1/6 of the eye
- A vascular and sensitive to touch
Supplied by the ophthalmic nerve, trigeminal nerve branch 1
- Nourished by aqueous humor, tears and absorbs oxygen from the air.
Structure and function of the middle layer
Choroid
- Dark brown membrane between the sclera and the retina
- Contains blood vessels and pigment which absorbs excess light.
Ciliary body
- Has a muscular and vascular part
- Connect the choroid with the circumference of the iris
- Has folds on its internal surface called the “Ciliary process”
- Secretes aqueous humor which fills the anterior and posterior chambers of the eye
Iris
- Thin contractile muscular diaphragm
- lies anterior to the lens
Pupil
- Central aperture in the iris
- Varies in size so it can regulate the amount of light entering the eye
- controlled by two muscles
- Sphincter muscles (closes the pupil)
- Dilator muscles ( dilates the pupil)
what is the Inner layers, structure and function
- 10 delicate layers of nervous tissue membrane
- Continuos with optic nerve
- outer layer is in contact with the choroid
- inner layer is in contact with the vitreous body
- Posteriorly have a circular depressed region called the optic disc
What are the two photoreceptors in the eye?
Rod cells
- Over a 100 million per eye
- positioned on the perphireal part of the retina
- Responds to dim light from black and white vision
- responds to form and movement but provides poor visual activity
Cones
- about 7 million per eye
- Provides colour vision and greater visual activity
- Concentrated in the fovea
what are the refractive media of the eye?
- Cornea
- Aqueous humor
- Lens
- Vitreous body
What is the structure and function of the lens
- Posterior ti the iris
- Transperent biconvex structure, enclosed within a capsule
- The capsule is anchored to the ciliary body by suspensory ligaments
- Convexity of the lens depends on whether or not you want to focus on near or far objects
- this is achieved by the ciliary muscles in the ciliary body
- increased convexity for near vision, flatter for far objects
Innervation of the orbit
- Oculomotor nerve (CN 3)
- Trochlear ( CN 4)
- Abducent (CN 6)
- Opthalmic nerve (branch of the trigeminal nerve CN5)
Arteries of the orbit
mainly the ophthalmic artery
- a branch of the internal carotoid artery
Veins of the orbit
Inferior and Superior Ophthalmic vein ( passes through SOF)
What are some red flags regarding the eye
- Severe ocular pain
- Severe orbital pain
- Microbial keratitis ( +/- contact lens use)
- Endophthalmitis (inflammation affecting the vitreous fluid)