Visual Pathways and Reflexes Flashcards

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1
Q

Describe the passage of the optic nerve

A

Optic nerve consists of axons of the retinal ganglion; it goes from the eye to the optic chiasm and then the axons pass through the optic chiasm to the optic tract

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2
Q

To what areas of the brain do (retinal ganglion) cells from the optic tract project?

A

Lateral geniculate nucleus (then to visual cortex in occipital lobe) and superior colliculus in the midbrain (optic tectum)

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3
Q

Where do the majority of (retinal ganglion) cells, that continue through the optic chiasm, project?

A

To the visual thalamic relay (LGN) which then sends axons to the optic radiation to the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe

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4
Q

Where is the primary visual cortex located?

A

Occipital lobe

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5
Q

How is visual recognition mediated?

A

By the lateral geniculate-occipital cortex pathway

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6
Q

Damage to what pathway leads to perceptual blindness?

A

Lateral geniculate-occipital cortex pathway

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7
Q

How is object tracking mediated?

A

Some optic nerve fibres project to the superior colliculus and this part of the brainstem is necessary for the ability to track a moving object

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8
Q

Damage to what pathway leads to difficulty fixating on an object or tracking a moving object?

A

Optic nerve fibres going to the superior colliculus (midbrain)

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9
Q

What is another name for the superior colliculus?

A

Optic tectum

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10
Q

Explain how information from one half of the visual field reaches the contralateral visual cortex

A

The left visual field projects to the right visual cortex (and vice versa). The nasal hemiretina from the left eye and the temporal hemiretina from the right eye both project to the same right visual cortex

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11
Q

What are the left and right visual fields?

A

Left or right of the fixation point

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12
Q

What is the nasal hemiretina?

A

The hemiretina closest to the nose (medial), and this projects to the contralateral visual cortex

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13
Q

What is the temporal hemiretina?

A

The hemiretina furthest from the nose (lateral) and this projects to the ipsilateral visual cortex

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14
Q

What drug blocks the pupillary light reflex?

A

Atropine

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15
Q

Describe the physiology of the pupillary light reflex

A
  1. Light activates retinal afferents of optic nerve (CN II) –> pretectal nuclei (just in front of the superior colliculus)
  2. Axons from the pretectal nuclei –> Edinger Westphal nuclei and the contralateral connection crosses in the posterior commissure before synapsing in the EW nuclei
  3. Preganglionic fibres (parasympathetic) from the EW enter the oculomotor nerve (CN III) and synapse in the ciliary ganglion
  4. Postganglionic fibres innervate the constrictor muscle of the iris (sphincter pupillae) –> pupillary constriction
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16
Q

Describe the physiology of the accommodation reflex

A
  1. Optic nerve afferents (CN II) travel to lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)
  2. The optic nerve afferents –> primary visual cortex (occipital lobe)
  3. Some fibres from occipital lobe go to the cells of accommodation centre (midbrain) near the pre-tectal region
  4. From here;fibres travel from the accommodation centre to EW nucleus
  5. At EW nucleus parasympathetic stimulation occurs –> ciliary muscle contraction –> shortens the suspensory ligament –> lens relaxation and passive thickening
  6. Accommodation centre also stimulates oculomotor efferents –> medial rectus –> convergence of the eyes to a near object
17
Q

What are frontal eye fields?

A

Specialised parts of the premotor cortex which are dedicated to motor control of the extraocular eye muscles

18
Q

What are the three aspects of the accommodation reflex?

A

Pupillary constriction, accommodation (lens thickening to see close object) and convergence (eyes moving in together)

19
Q

Describe how lens thickness is controlled

A

At rest the lens is under tension from the ring of suspensory ligaments which stretch and flatten it away from it’s relaxed shape. The ciliary muscle is a sphincter, and when this contracts it reduces the diameter of the ring of suspensory ligaments and provides slack to the tension –> lens bulges out to its relaxed shape (thickening –> greater refractive power)

20
Q

What is the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR)?

A

This reflex functions to stabilize images on the retinas during head movement by producing eye movements in the direction opposite to head movement, thus preserving the image on the center of the visual field(s)

21
Q

Describe the physiology of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR)

A

Sensory input = CN VIII (vistubulocochlear nerve) –> carries signals from semicircular canals
Output = CN VI (abducens nerve) and CN III (oculomotor nerve)

22
Q

What is nystagmus?

A

Pathology of the VOR and is a combination of an initial slow rotation followed by a fast flick back; direction of pathology is given by the direction of the fast flick

23
Q

What is the function of the blink reflex?

A

Protects the eyes from foreign bodies

24
Q

Describe the physiology of the blink reflex

A

Input: sensory nerve endings in the cornea of conjuncive (V1 - ophthalmic branch)
Output: facial nerve (CN VII) motor to the orbicularis oculi muscle to push the eyelids together

25
Q

What is a scotoma?

A

Like a blind spot and will only appear in the affected eye

26
Q

What is the result of a partial optic nerve lesion?

A

An ipsilateral scotoma e.g. if there is partial optic nerve lesion in left eye, this causes a blind spot in the left eye

27
Q

What is the result of a complete optic nerve lesion?

A

Blindness in that eye

28
Q

What is the result of an optic chiasm lesion?

A

Bitemporal hemianopia i.e. loss of the lateral portion of vison in both eyes

29
Q

What is the result of an optic tract lesion?

A

Homonymous hemianopia e.g. if there is lesion of optic tract on right side, this will cause the loss of vision on the left side in both eyes

30
Q

What is the role of the medial longitudinal fasciculus?

A

Links CN III, IV and VI near the midline