Module 9: age 3-5 years. Learning, developing, and making connections Flashcards
Which part of the eye provides sharp vision?
- The fovea (centre of the macula)
- Has most receptors
Which part of the eye senses light and creates electrical impulses that are sent through the optic nerve to the brain.
Retina
What is the path of info received from left visual fields?
- Info hits Right side of retina
- Travels through optic chasm to Right lateral geniculate body
- travels to R occipital lobe = primary visual area
what eye muscles are enervated by oculomotor Nerve?
- Superior rectus
- inferior rectus
- medial rectus
- inferior oblique
Which nerve is lateral rectus supplied by?
- Abducens
Trochlear N innervates which muscle?
which direction of vision does this accomodate
- Superior oblique
- In & down
(medial & inferior)
What are the 6 eye movements that keep the fovea on target?
(All eye movements are about foveating)
- Saccadic
- Smooth Pursuit
- Vergence movements - eyes move in opposite directions (disconjugate)
- Vestibulo-ocular movements
- Optokinetic movements
- Fixation system
What are the 6 eye movements that keep the fovea on target?
(All eye movements are about foveating)
- Saccadic
- Smooth Pursuit
- Vergence movements - eyes move in opposite directions (disconjugate)
- Vestibulo-ocular movements
- Optokinetic movements
- Fixation system
What distance is expected for normal convergence?
- 5cm (5yrs - adult
- 10cm ( 3ys child)
Which nucleus is responsible for extra ocular eye muscles innervated by oculomotor N?
- Somatic motor nucleus
Which spinal tract controls ipsilateral tone that is referred to in relation to PMRF?
- RETICULOSPINAL tract
**Ipsilateral
- Muscle tone & posture
- tone of respiratory muscles
- FROM reticular formation
- TO LMN ventral horn
what drives Pursuit movements?
- Parietal lobe pulls
- same side parietal as direction of pursuit
eg. pursuit to L = L parietal pulls
What drives Saccadic movements?
- Frontal eye field pushes
eg. Saccade to L = R frontal eye field pushes
What eye movements make up OPK movements?
describe what’s happening if checking OPK reflex to L?
- Pursuits (slow phase) & saccades (fast phase)
- L parietal pulls, L cerebellum catches
- L frontal eye fields push & L cerebellum initiates saccade to R
- R cerebellum catches at midline
- pursuit to L initiated by R cerebellum & L parietal pulls
Cerebellar tests for 3-5yrs old
- Posture
- gait
- DDK - clapping, fingers, piano fingers
- single leg balance
- Dysmetria