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Published bySherman Barnett Modified over 9 years ago
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Senses Vision
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V I S I O N 70% of all receptors in the body are in the eye
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External Anatomy Eyelids Eyelashes Conjunctiva Lacrimal glands
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Conjunctiva Inner surface of eyelid
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Infection: Conjunctivitis “Pink eye”
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Infection: Conjunctivitis “Pink eye”
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Lacrimal Glands Lubricate the eye Lysozymes – natural antibiotic Drains into nose
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Eye Movement 6 muscles / eye 3 Cranial nerves – III Oculomotor – IV Trochlear – VI Abducens
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Eyeball External Walls “tunics”
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Outer Sclera White CT “White” of the eye
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Outer Sclera Central anterior is clear and forms cornea
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Outer Sclera Cornea can be transplanted – no blood vessels
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Vascular Tunic Blood-rich for nutrition Lens attaches to anterior end “ciliary body”
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Sensory Tunic Called - Retina Contains rods and cones Sensory photoreceptors
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Sensory Tunic Impulses leave by optic nerve No photoreceptors where optic nerve leaves - “blind spot”
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Rods Gray tones Fx: Dim light & Peripheral vision Loss: Night blindness Usually vitamin A deficiency
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Cones Color details Heaviest in center of retina – fovea centralis – sharpest vision spot
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Cones & Colors Blue, Red, & Green More than one type firing – intermediate colors –Red & Blue = Purple
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Cones & Colors If all 3 firing = white If none firing = black Color interpretation in Brain NOT retina
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Colorblindness If lack all 3 cones – colorblind – See shades of gray If lack one cone – partial colorblindness
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Colorblindness Most common is lack of red or green Color vision genes – X chromosome – Sex-linked – Almost always males
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Lens Focuses light on retina Turns opaque as we age Can lead to cataracts
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Cataracts
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Chambers of Eye Liquid (humor) hold shape of eyeball Lens divides into 2 chambers Anterior – aqueous humor Posterior – vitreous humor
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Chambers of Eye Anterior – aqueous humor – like plasma – nutrients for lens and cornea – Constantly formed and drained
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Chambers of Eye If drain blocked, increases pressure Glaucoma
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Chambers of Eye Posterior – vitreous humor – Gel-like protein – Not replaceable
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Focusing the Eye Lens changes shape to focus image on retina = accommodation
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Focusing the Eye Myopia – Short vision – Focuses in front of retina – Distant objects appear blurry
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Focusing the Eye Hyperopia – Far vision – Focuses beyond retina – Close objects appear blurry
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Focusing the Eye Presbyopia – “Old eye” (40’s) – Lens hardening – Cannot accommodate “near vision” – Hold it out further
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Focusing the Eye Astigmatism – Unequal curvature of cornea or lens – Focus point different for each eye
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Visual Nerve Path Retina → Axons → Form bundles of axons → Form Optic Nerve
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Visual Nerve Path At Optic chiasma – Lateral fibers stay on same side of brain – Medial fibers cross over to other side of brain
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Visual Nerve Path
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Lateral and medial fibers form optic tract (left & right)
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Visual Nerve Path Optic tract synapses with thalamus Form optic radiation on occipital lobe – Visual interpretation
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