The eye and vision (special senses) Flashcards
Identify the main anatomical components of vision.
• Eyeball - optical front end and retina/optic disc at the back ANTERIOR SEGMENT (cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens) (made of anterior chamber, between the posterior surface of the cornea (i.e. the corneal endothelium) and the iris, and the posterior chamber (between the iris and the front face of the vitreous)) POSTERIOR SEGMENT (vitreous humor, retina, choroid, and optic nerve)
- Connections - optic nerve, chiasm, optic tract, LGN, radiation
- Brain – occipital, temporal, parietal and frontal lobes
What is the function of the cornea ?
Major light focusing element of the eye
When might corneal oedema occur ?
After surgery for cataract.
Define refraction of the eye. Which parts of the eye are involved in this ?
Refracting the light
• Cornea
– largest element (40D)
– Interfaces with air (low RI) - big difference (lot of refraction occurs here)
• Lens
– lesser element (20D)
– Interfaces with aqueous (similar RI) – small difference (less refraction occurs here)
– But can vary in power (accommodation)
• Whole Eye Ball
– About 60D
State the near triad.
Triad of things occurring when looking at something up close:
- Miosis (because reduces aberration with lens, get pinhole effect, so sharper vision)
- Convergence (eyes turning in)
- Accommodation
Identify the main refractive errors. Which is the most common ?
1) Presbyopia (most common form of refractive error)
2) Myopia
3) Hypermetropia
What is presbyopia ?
Failure to accommodate (e.g. when you are older) due to weaker ciliary muscles and stiffer lens, meaning eye gets fixed in the distance
What is myopia ? How does it arise ?
Distant objects appear blurred (short-sightedness). Eye is bigger, so when parallel light comes into the eye it focuses short of the back of the eye. Need minifying (minus/concave) lens for the light to hit back of the eye more clearly.
Can be due to:
▫ Open angle glaucoma
▫ Retinal detachment (eye gets bigger but retina remains same size, so retina becomes stretched, and detaches)
What is hypermetropia ? How does it arise ?
Nearby objects appear blurred (long sightedness). Associated with squint and lazy eye (amblyopia). Eye is smaller so when light comes in from far, it focuses to point behind retina, so blurred vision. Need magnifying (plus) lens to make it converge more to hit back of the eye.
Can be due to:
▫ Angle closure glaucoma (structures are anatomically crowded in the anterior segment. System can get blocked due to crowding, and increase intraocular P)
▫ Ischaemic optic neuropathy= “Disc at risk”
What is the main type of uncorrected refractive error ?
Presboyopia (failure to accommodate when you are older)
What is the main cause of blindness in the world ? of visual impairment ?
Cataracts (followed by glaucoma). Other causes include Age-related Macular Degeneration, Refractory Error, Trachoma, Corneal Blindness
Refractive error (followed by cataracts). Other causes include glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration
What is the distance for Arclight ? How does this change the scoring system for visual acuity ?
• The Arclight chart is 50% smaller chart with 50% smaller letters and so you use the chart at 50% distance = 3m
Top line is still called the 60 line and so you document the vision as 6/60 and 6/36
What is the standard distance for normal Snellen charts ?
6M
Identify steps in testing distance visual acuity.
- Measure out 3m
- Cover left eye with palm of hand
- Ask patient to read from the top of the chart
- Chart must be held perpendicular to patient in good lighting, smoothed out and flat
- Record the ‘number’ of the smallest line that can be seen
- If cannot read even the top letter then go to 1.5m and repeat
- If cannot read even the top letter at 1.5m then go to 0.5m and repeat
- If cannot see at 0.5m then try counting fingers (CF) at 1m, hand movements (HM) then perception of light and classify with projection or with no projection of perception of light then finally no perception of light
- Repeat for fellow eye
- Repeat with both eyes together
- Repeat with pinhole and with glasses
Identify the main categories of visual acuity scores.
Normal to Mild Visual Impairment (Group 0 in WHO Classification): <6/18
Moderate Visual Impairment (G1): 6/18 to 6/60
Severe visual impairment (G2): 6/60 to 3/60
Blindness (G3): 3/60 to 1/60
Blindness (G4): 1/60 to HM, CF, PL
Blindness (G5): NPL
Unspecified or observed visual behaviour (G9): N/A
Define accommodation in the context of vision.
Process by which eye changes optical power to maintain a clear image or focus on an object as its distance varies.
- When looking at something in distance, ciliary muscles relax, zonules tighten up, and pull on lens which makes it flatter (less convex shape)
- When looking at something close, clilary muscle contracting, zonules which hold lens relax, lens more spherical, bends light more
What is the white of the eye made of ?
Sclera (continuation of cornea) made up of tough collagen.
Why is the sclera white given that cornea (both made of collagen) clear ?
In sclera, collagen fibrils are oriented in such a way that it becomes opaque
In cornea, fibrils are very parallel to each other, which means the light can travel through, and it’s a clear structure
What is the relation between sclera and conjunctiva ?
On top of sclera lies the conjunctiva, which is a clear layer (between the two lie BVs) which also lines eyelids
Identify the main components of the iris.
Two muscles, one constrictor and one dilator, which form a circular hole (pupil) which is black (hence pupil is formed by iris)
Define hypopyon.
Inflammatory cells build up in anterior chamber as yellow layer of cells called hypopyon.
Define hyphema.
Layer of red cells at the bottom of anterior chamber of the eye due to bleed
Describe the layers of the cornea.
1) Epithelium
2) Thick layer of collagen
3) Endothelium
What is the function of the endothelium of the cornea ?
Pumping fluid out of stroma of the collagen layer, to keep it dry, and keep collagen fibers parallel and regularly spaced, to keep clarity of cornea