Vision - Refraction and Accommodation Flashcards
When happens to light rays when they pass through a different medium?
They bend
How do biconvex lenses affect light rays?
Bends light which focuses at a singular point
How do biconcave lenses affect light rays?
Causes light to diverge
What is the function of refractive media in the eyeball?
Transparent refractive media in front of the retina, i.e. the cornea, AH and VH, is what allows light to fall on the retina and create an image
What is refraction?
Light waves from an object bend at the cornea, and then bend some more at the lens to form a clear image on the retina
What occurs to allow the eye focus on close up objects?
The eye needs more bending powering to focus on an object (as eye receives more divergent rays) -> the lens becomes thicker and hence more powerful, and a clear image is formed on the retina
Define accommodation
The changes occurring in both eyes as it changes focus from a distant to a close object
What three changes occur with accommodation?
- Lens changes shape (becomes thicker & more spherical)
- Pupil constricts
- Eyes converge
Describe the steps in lens thickening during accommodation
- Ciliaris contracts making the ciliary muscle body bulge
- Space in the middle decreases, as bulging brings the ciliary body ends closer
- Suspensory ligaments becomes lax which released the stretch on the lens
- Len thickens
(Parasympathetic)
Describes what happens in pupil constriction during accommodation
To sharpen focus to see objects up close, the pupil constricts to allow only a few rays (those from the object) to pass through
What muscle in involved in pupil constriction during accommodation?
Pupillary constrictor (sphincter pupillae) which is a concentric muscle around the border of the pupil which gets parasympathetic innervation (CN III)
Describe what when the eyes converge during accommodation
When focussing on an object up close, our eyes have to turn in to look at the object convergence
Medial rectus muscles of both eyes are uses - oculomotor nerve (CN III) innervated
What is the defect in myopia (shortsightedness)?
Eyeball is slightly longer in length that normal, so when light rays converge it forms an image in front of the retina so they are not seen clearly. Close objects look clear, distant objects appear hazy.
‘Bending power’ of cornea and lens is too much for the eyeball
What are the symptoms of myopia?
- Headaches
- Infants & preverbal children divergent squint
- Toddlers loss of interest in sports/people
- Teachers notice child is losing interest in class
How is myopia corrected?
- Biconcave lenses - diverges light so light is focused on the retina
- Glasses
- Laser eye surgery – removes flap of cornea and exposes stroma and burns a bit away to flatten lens