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p. 250-255 Essentials of Anatomy Seeley Stephens Tate SPECIAL SENSES PART III VISION AND THE EYE
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Eyebrows: Perspiration, sunlight Eyelids & lashes Foreign objects (blink reflex) Lubricate eyes with blinking (20/min) Conjunctiva Membrane inner eyelid/ covers anterior eye Lubrication Small amt tears mucus ACCESSORY STRUCTURES OF THE EYE
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LACRIMAL APPARATUS
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Rectus muscles Superior, inferior Medial, lateral Oblique muscles Superior, inferior EXTRINSIC EYE MUSCLES
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3 Tunics (layers) Fibrous Vascular Nervous ANATOMY OF THE EYE
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Sclera: firm white outer connective tissue maintain shape, attachment of muscle, protect Cornea: transparent, anterior eye allow light to enter, refracts light FIBROUS TUNIC
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most blood vessels CHOROID: Thin vascular network and melanin- containing cells, appears black CILIARY BODY: smooth muscles, LENS: flexible transparent disc IRIS: colored part, contractile muscles, anterior to lens, regulates diameter of the pupil PUPIL: opening, light passes through VASCULAR TUNIC
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Pigmented Retina: w/choroid keeps light from reflecting into the eye Sensory Retina: contains rods/cones, interneurons Rods: 20 x more common, sense light Cones: need more light, sense color 6-7 million Long (Red), Short (blue), Medium (green) varieties NERVOUS TUNIC
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Rod cells: rhodopsin (opsin and retinal) pigment Light changes retinal’s shape Night blindness: vitamin A deficiency Cone cells: blue, red, green opsin NERVOUS TUNIC
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Rods/cones synapse with bipolar sensory cells then ganglion (cell bodies) which converge to form optic nerve NERVOUS TUNIC
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Fovea Centralis: only cone cells, light most focused Macula lutea: yellow spot contains fovea centralis Optic disc: blood vessels enter NERVOUS TUNIC Optic disc: blood vessels enter optic nerve exits “blind spot” of the eye no photoreceptors Macula lutea Fovea Centralis
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Anterior and Posterior chambers: aqueous humor-watery fluid of eye, produced by ciliary body Maintain pressure, refracts light Vitreous chamber: vitreous humor – jellylike substance helps maintain pressure, hold lens and retina in place CHAMBERS OF THE EYE
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FUNCTIONS OF THE EYE
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Cornea: Convex, light is bent so the rays converge Lens: also convex, fine focus adjustments by changing shape Ciliary body maintains pressure on lens, relatively flat = long distance Object closer than 20 feet, ciliary muscles contract, ciliary body closer to lens, lens flexes more spherical Accommodation: process of ciliary body moving lens to focus on objects closer than 20 feet ACCOMMODATION
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EYE TESTS & DISORDERS
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Snellen Eye Chart At 20 feet you can read a letter that most humans can read at 20 feet 20/200 means you can read at 20 feet a letter most can read at 200 feet LogMAR chart is considered more reliable font, spacing, number of letters STATION 1: VISUAL ACUITY
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STATION 2: ASTIGMATISM Misshapen cornea or lens Blurry, fuzzy vision at all distances Snellen Astigmatism Test If lines appear wavy or different colors (thinner), you may have astigmatism Clear vision, same thickness same spacing
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Myopoia: Near Sighted (trouble with distant) Eye focuses light in front of the retina Long eyeball, strong lens MYOPIA & HYPEROPIA Hyperopia: Far Sighted trouble close objects 5-10% of Americans Flat lens, short eyeball
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Decrease in ability of eye to accommodate near vision Part of aging process Lens is no longer flexible PRESBYOPIA
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Optic Disc – no photoreceptors BLIND SPOT
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August Seebeck used 300 colored papers (1837). Participants matched papers to a sample color. Holmgren (1877) used colored wool. Colors that are difficult to distinguish can indicate color vision difficulties. Ishichara color plates are commonly seen for color vision deficiency testing. STATION 4: COLOR VISION
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Can be complete or only decrease in perception Most common cause is faulty cone development More frequent in males (8% males with northern european ancestry, only 1% of females) X-linked genetic trait COLOR DEFICIENCY (COLOR BLINDNESS)
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Conjunctivitis: inflammation (usually bacterial, aka pinkeye) Neonatal ophthalamia: severe form, high risk of blindness to infant if mother is infected Chlamydial conjunctivitis Gonorrheal EYE DISORDERS Trachoma: leading infectious cause of blindness; scarring of cornea
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A clouding in the lens Proteins that make up the lens clump together Most are related to aging Smoking, diabetes, radiation also suspected causes CATARACT (b) The same scene viewed with cataracts. (a) Normal vision
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Cataract: (22 million U.S.) Clouding of lens due to age, infection, trauma Glaucoma: (2 million) Pressure build up from aqueous humor Diabetes meliitus: A major cause of blindness in U.S. Damage to optic nerve, cataracts, retinal detach CAUSES OF BLINDNESS
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