Ophthalmology Flashcards
How thick is cornea?
About 0.77 to 0.89 mm
Parts of the cornea.
Epithelium
Stroma
Descemet’s membrane
Endothelium
Innervation of cornea.
it is innervated diffusely by the long ciliary nerves, which arise from the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve (cranial nerve V) and terminate in naked nerve endings in the anterior stroma and among the wing cells of the corneal epithelium.
Evaluation of PLR
light
Palpebral reflex- afferent and efferent arms
Afferent= V cranial nerve Efferent= VII facial nerve
Corneal reflex
corneal sensation- afferent way: trigeminal nerve
efferent way: facial nerve
Lagophthalmos
incomplete eyelid closure
What is strabismus
Strabismus is abnormal eye position, ‘misalignment’. Can be unilateral, bilateral; converging/diverging upward/downward (hypotropia/hypertropia).
2 main functions of the cornea
- Protection
- Vision 70 % of the light is refracted on the cornea.
Iridodialysis
Separation of the iris from the ciliary body mainly as a result of trauma.
Most common causes of uveitis
Primary
Secondary : blunt / trauma, IO neoplasia, corneal ulceration, lents rupture, catarate, parasitic infection, systemic disease (bacteremia/septicemia “S. equi, L. interrogans, L. pomona and Gram- sepsis), immune-complex disease; viremia, diseminated mycosis and ERU syndrome)
Congenital abnormalities of the lens
Aphakia- lack of lens
Microphakia- to small lens
Spherophakia- spherical lens
Lenticonus- bulging, protrusion of the anterior or posterior pole of the lens.
Coloboma- missing part of the lens, usually notching of the equator.
Most of the congenital lens abnormalities is associated with multiple ocular defects as during embryonal development lens is a important ‘stimulus’ for the development of other parts of the eye.
Anatomy and physiology of conjunctiva
mucous membranes that cover the inner aspect of the eyelids and eyeball. Stratified non-keratinized columnar epithelium + goblet cells (producing mucous) and connective tissue= fibrous and lymphoid tissue (everted lymph nodes) + abundant blood vessels.
Healing of the conjunctiva
Very quick, the only problem is the restoration of the normal amount of goblet cells which takes longer.
Layers of the retina.
- RPE- retinal pigmented epithelium
- Photoreceptor layer.
- External limiting membrane.
- Outer nuclear layer.
- Outer plexiform layer.
- Inner nuclear layer.
- Inner plexiform layer.
- Ganglion cell layer.
- Optic nerve fiber layer.
- Internal limiting layer.
Retinal pigmented epithelium.
The outermost retinal layer- creating the non-sensory retina. Lays between choroid and photoreceptor layer and contain melanin granules. It’s dark brown except for the part with tapetum.
The main role of that layer is to provide nutrition for the neurosensory retina, recycling of the bleached ‘used’ photopigment, storage of the vitamin A, phagocytosis, absorb stray light and free radicals.
Photoreceptor layer.
Outer segments of rods and cones that contain stacked discs with photopigment, and part of the inner segments with mitochondria. Here’s where transduction of light stimulus happens.
Outer nuclear layer.
Cell bodies of rods and cones.
Outer plexiform layer.
Synaptic connections between photoreceptors and bipolar, amacrine and horizontal cells.
Inner nuclear layer.
Cell bodies of horizontal, bipolar, amacrine and Mullers cells.
Inner plexiform layer.
Is the second synaptic layer between axons of amacrine, bipolar, horizontal cells and retinal ganglion cells.
Ganglion cell layer.
cell bodies of the RGCs, usually one cell thick, axons of these cells run parallel to the retina and converge onto the optic disc.
Nerve fibre layer.
Axons of the RGCs that run parallel to the retina and converge onto the optic disc.
Internal limiting layer
Basement layer, the border between the retina and vitreous.
Types of cells that form neuro-retina.
Rods, cones, amacrine, horizontal, bipolar, interplexiform neurons, Muller’s cells, retinal ganglion cells.
Blood supply to the retina.
Dual blood supply (as the most metabolically active tissue in the body).
1- Choroid vessels that supply outer retina and
2- retinal vessels that supply mid and inner retina, they’re branches of posterior ciliary arteries called cilioretinal arteries and penetrate the sclera in a circle around the optic disc.
Ocular surface microflora.
Gram+: Staphylococcus, Bacillus, Corynebacterium; Streptomyces.
Gram-: Moraxella, Escherichia, Acinetobacter, Enterobacter.
Fungi: Aspergillus, Clodosporium, Alternaria, Peneicillium, Mucor.
Keratomalacia
corneal melting, results when there is an overabundance of these enzymatic proteins elaborated by these recruited inflammatory cells, activated resident host cells, and any pathogens present.
The destructive forces overwhelm the restorative responses and result in dissolution of corneal collagen and necrosis of cells. The production of elastase and alkaline phosphatase by Pseudomonas, hyaluronidase by Staphylococcus and other extracellular proteases by fungal organisms can greatly augment this melting process.
Even when an infection is eradicated by the frequent use of an effective antimicrobial, residual proteases may continue to destroy the corneal matrix, even after microbial replication has ceased