Pupil Evaluation Flashcards
what are the afferent pathways evaluated in a pupil exam?
- eye to midbrain (pupillary light reflex)
- eye to cortex (pupillary near reflex)
what are the efferent pathways evaluated in a pupil exam?
-brain to pupils (CN III to pupillary sphincter muscle and oculosympathetic pathway to pupillary dilator)
describe the afferent pathway (from eye to brain)
- pre-geniculate visual pathways (optic nerve and anterior portion of optic tracts)
- projections to midbrain
describe efferent pathway (from brain to eye)
- CN III to pupillary sphincter
- oculosympathetic pathway to pupillary dilator
fibers from nasal retina go where
cross to the opposite side at the chiasm
percent of fibers that are nasal are
53-55%
percent of fibers that are temporal are
45-47%
what is the anatomical basis for the consensual pupillary light reflex
crossing over in optic chiasm and posterior commissure
a lesion in the afferent pathway produces
- impaired pupillary light reflex (but not near reflex)
- light-near dissociation
- APD (if unilateral or asymmetric damage to the 2 afferent pathways)
what is light-near dissociation?
near reflex is stronger and quicker than light reflex
damage to afferent pathway does NOT cause:
- anisocoria
- change in near reflexes
3rd cranial nerve efferent pathway involved what input and what structure?
parasympathetics to pupillary sphincter
oculosympathetic pathway involves what input and what structure?
sympathetics to pupillary dilator
efferent pathway damage causes
- changes in pupil size (if asymmetric or unilateral damage)
- reduced pupil function (of some type)
if CN III efferent pathway damage, what affect on pupil function?
reduced response of light and near