Special Senses: The Eye Flashcards
What % of blindness is “preventable”? Name four common causes of blindness
50% is preventable.
ARMD (age related macular degeneration), glaucoma, cataracts, diabetic retinopathy
In which age groups is blindness more common?
1/5 >75 and 1/2 >90
What is phototransduction? How is it done in the eye and the ear?
The process in which light energy is translated into electrical energy
Eye: Light energy into electrical signals
Ear: sound energy/vibration into electrical signals
What is the role of photoreceptors? List the two types
They code the image formed on the retina into APs
Rods and Cones
Which component of photoreceptors are sensitive to low level light (night vision)? Where are they located?
Rods, located in all areas of the retina except the fovea
Which component of photoreceptors is responsible for daytime vision? Where is it located?
Cones, highest density at the fovea
Which component of photoreceptors can detect 3 different photopigments and which pigments can it detect?
Cones, can detect photopigments red, green and blue
What are the clinical terms for near and farsightedness?
Near: myopia
Far: hypermetropia
What process summarizes how images are focused onto the retina?
Refraction
What causes hypermetropia? Where is the image formed?
The lens is too weak (too flat or the eyeball is too short so that the focus lies behind the retina which is where the image forms
What causes myopia? Where is the image formed?
The strength of the lens system is too strong (too curved) or the axial length of the eye is too long so that the focus lies in front the retina which is where the image forms
Name five components of a vision assessment and the tools that might be used to test them + two more things that can be tested for bonus!
- Visual Acuity: snellen chart
- Colour vision: ishihara test
- Pupillary reflexes
- Blind spot
- Ophthalmoscopy/Fundoscopy
+Visual fields and eye movements
Define a blindspot, which area of the eye does it correspond with?
A small area lateral to the centre of the visual field where there is no visual perception, corresponds to the optic disc as there are no photoreceptors there
What does ophthalmoscopy/fundoscopy allow for the visualization of? What should you do to allow for a better ophthalmoscope examination?
Should use papillary dilatation to get a better view Black blobs in the vitreous Retina Optic nerve Fovea
What is the presence of vitreous indicative of?
Vitreous hemorrhage
What would indicate a papilloedema on a fundoscopy?
Swelling of the optic nerve
What is vitreous and where is it? What happens to it with age?
Gel-like substance that helps the eye maintain its round shape and becomes thinner with age. It’s in the posterior segment of the eye
What might you examine for when looking at the retina?
Hemorrhage, detachment and vessels
Which region of the eye has the highest density of photoreceptors in the retina?
The fovea
Describe the process of ‘accommodation’
*including the three ‘processes’ involved
As an object approaches, the eye light rays from it increasingly diverge, the focal point is moved backwards and the eye must accommodate with pupil constriction in order to maintain a clear image on the retina
- Constriction of pupils
- Thickening of lens (increasing its convexity) due to constriction of ciliary muscles
- Convergence of both eyeballs
What is presbyopia and which process becomes compromised in this ‘condition’?
Age related farsightedness as the lens becomes stiffer with age (too concave with the loss of elasticity) and there is a resulting decrease in accommodation/focusing
So close objects are no longer focused onto the retina
How is presbyopia corrected for?
Convex lens of increasing strength
Which muscle is responsible for changing the shape of the lens (and thus influences how much light comes into the eye?)
Ciliary Muscle
Which structure in the eye dictates the size (big or small) of the pupil?
The iris (as they contain circular muscles around the pupil)