Orbit and Cavernous Sinus Flashcards
What 7 bones make up the orbit?
Frontal, Sphenoid, Maxilla, Lacrimal, Ethmoid, Zygomatic, Palatine
What 4 areas can the orbit be divided into?
roof, medial and lateral walls, and floor
What bones form the roof of the orbit?
mosty frontal, portion of sphenoid toward the apex
What bones form the medial wall of the orbit?
Frontal bone forms superior portion - maxilla: frontal process of maxilla; will form anterior portion of lacrimal fossa - lacrimal bone: entire bone; will form posterior portion of lacrimal fossa - ethmoid bone: forms majority of medial wall - sphenoid: towards the apex
What bones form the lateral wall of the orbit?
Zygomatic bone anteriorly - Sphenoid posteriorly
What bones make up the floor of the orbit?
Maxilla: majority of floor - Zygomatic bone: anterolaterally - Palatine bone: posteromedially
What are the bony structures of the orbit?
optic canal, superior orbital fissure, inferior orbital fissure, anterior and posterior ethmoidal foramina, lacrimal fossa
What passes through the optic canal?
optic n. (CN II), ophthalmic a.
What passes through the superior orbital fissure?
CN III, IV, V1, VI, and ophthalmic vv. (sup., and inf.)
What passes through the inferior orbital fissure?
infra-orbital n. and zygomatic n. (V2), and the connection between the pterygopalatine fossa and orbit
What passes through the anterior and posterior ethmoidal foramina?
anterior and posterior ethmoidal neurovasculature
What passes through the lacrimal fossa?
nasolacrimal sac
What are the tissues of the eyelid superficial to deep?
Skin, subcutaneous tissue, palpebral fibers of orbicularis oculi, tarso-facial layers, then palpebral conjunctiva
What is the skin of the eyelid continuous with?
the conjuctiva
what is contained within the subcutaneous tissue?
a small amount of adipose tissue
What is the tarso-facial layer composed of?
tarsal plates, medial & lateral palpebral ligaments, tarsal glands, aponeurosis of levator palpebrae superioris m. (superior eyelid only), superior & inferior tarsal mm.
What parts is the conjunctiva split in to?
marginal, tarsal, and orbital parts
what is the conjunctiva?
a delicate mucous membrane that lines the eyelids and covers the anterior aspect of the eyeball (excepting the cornea and pupil)
What covers the eyeball? what lines the eyelids?
the bulbar conjunctiva ; the palpebral conjunctiva
What are the conjunctive fornices?
the inferior and superior fornices are the reflections of conjunctiva from bulbar to palpebral conjunctiva
What is the conjunctival sac?
the potential space between bulbar and palpebral conjunctiva.
Where is the lacrimal gland located?
superolateral margin of the orbit, within the lacrimal fossa of the frontal bone.
What muscles does the lacrimal gland sit between?
sits between the aponeurosis for levator palpebrae superioris m. (medial to the gland) and the lateral rectus m. (inferior to the gland)
Where does the lacrimal gland secrete into?
into the conjunctival sac along the lateral margin of the superior fornix
What is the flow of tear fluid?
conducted across the conjunctiva and accumulates in the lacrimal lake in the medial canthus
What structure is deep to the lacrimal lake?
the lacrimal caruncle
What structures are located superior and inferior to the lacrimal lake? What do they host?
lacrimal papillae : lacrimal puncta (pores) which tear fluid flows in to
How is fluid conducted from the lacrimal puncta?
via superior and inferior canaliculi into the lacrimal sac
What is the superior dilation of the nasolacrimal duct?
the lacrimal sac
Where does the lacrimal sac lie?
in the lacrimal groove of the lacrimal bone
What conducts tears into the inferior nasal meatus?
The nasolacrimal duct
What is the route of lacrimal fluid from start to finish?
lacrimal gland → conjunctival sac → lacrimal lake → lacrimal papillae → lacrimal puncta → lacrimal canaliculi (superior & inferior) → lacrimal sac → nasolacrimal duct → inferior nasal meatus
What is the parasympathetic pathway of the lacrimal gland?
After ganglion, they hitchhike the maxillary nerve (V2) to the zygomaticotemporal n., then lacrimal n., then gland
What is the “classic condition” by which the lacrimal gland receives postganglionic parasympathetic fibers?
pterygopalatine ganglion > V2 > zygomaticotemporal brs. > lacrimal n. > lacrimal gland
What is the more common way by which postganglionic parasympathetic fibers innervate the lacrimal gland?
pterygopalatine ganglion > zygomaticotemporal brs. > lacrimal gland
what does the fibrous portion of the eye provide?
structure and strength to the eyeball
What does the fibrous layer of the eye consist of?
the cornea and sclera
What is the sclera? what is it referred to as commonly?
The sclera covers the majority of the eyeball, is often referred to as the “white of the eye.” It is the insertion site for extra-ocular and intrinsic eye muscles.
what is the cornea?
The cornea covers the anterior portion of the eye (approximately ⅙th of the anterior eye) is completely avascular, sensitive to touch, and is the main refractive index of the eye.
What three stuctures make up the uvea (vascular portion of the eye)?
choroid, ciliary body, and iris
What is the iris?
a diaphragm located on the anterior surface of the lens
What part of the eye is important for transmitting light?
the pupil
What portions of the eye has color? What is the black portion?
Iris : Pupil
What muscles control the pupil?
sphincter pupillae (contracts pupil, parasympathetically-controlled) and dilator pupillae (dilates pupil, sympathetically-controlled).
what composes the inner layer of the eye?
the “neural” layer is composed of the neural retina.
How many layers is the retina composed of? What is contained in those layers?
10 : specialized receptors (rods and cones) as well as interneurons, glia, and ganglion cells
the axons of the ganglion cells exit the retina as the ___________.
optic nerve CN II
What is the main source of blood to the retina?
the retinal a.
How does the retinal a. get to the retina?
it travels within the optic nerve and is a branch of the ophthalmic a.
what are the extra-ocular muscles of the eye?
levator palpebrae superioris m., superior oblique m., superior rectus m., lateral rectus m., medial rectus m., inferior rectus m., inferior oblique m.
What extra-oricular mm. have their origen and insertion at the common anular tendon, and the sclera their respective postion?
the rectus mm. (superior, inferior, lateral, medial)
where do the rectus mm. of the eye originate and insert?
origen: common anular tendon - insertion: Sclera of eye (at respective position ie. superior sclera of eye, etc.)
What extra-ocular m. are not innervated by the occulomoter? what are they innervated by?
Superior oblique m. (trochlear CN IV) and lateral rectus (Abducens CN VI)
What extra-ocular mm. are innervated by the superior division of the occulomotor n.? inferior division?
Levator palpebrae superioris m., and superior rectus m. ——- Medial rectus m., inferior rectus m., and inferior oblique m.