Chapter 15: Special Senses (eye anatomy)
palpebral conjunctiva
A
inner layer
M
rods, cones
What are the 2 types of photoreceptors?
offers protection from foreign objects and spreads secretions to moisten eye
What does reflex blinking do for the eye?
sty
inflammation of any of the smaller sebaceous glands
excretory ducts of lacrimal gland
C
lens fibers
form bulk of lens and are filled with transparent protein crystallin
lacrimal punctum
D
photoreceptors to bipolar cells to ganglion cells to optic nerve
How does the signal spread in the neural layer of the retina?
lacrimal canaliculus
E
nasolacrimal duct
F
conjunctival sac
K
-moves eye laterally -moves eye medially
What is the action of the lateral rectus? medial rectus?
-supplies blood to all layers of eyeball; brown pigment absorbs light to prevent scattering light and visual confusion -control shape of lens which allows for accommodation of the eye
What is the function of the choroid? What is the function of the ciliary muscles?
absorbs light and prevents it from scattering, phagocytizes photoreceptor cell fragments, stores vitamin A
What is the function of the pigmented layer of the retina?
-protects and shapes eyeball, anchors extrinsic eye muscles -forms clear window that lets light enter eye and bends light
What is the function of the sclera? cornea?
lens fibers are continually added
Why do lenses become more dense, convex, and less elastic with age?
lens epithelium
anterior region of cuboidal cells that differentiate into lens fiber cells
cornea
transparent anterior fibrous later of eye
-elevates eye and turns it laterally -depresses eye and turns it laterally
What is the action of the inferior oblique? superior oblique?
lens
biconvex, transparent, flexible, and avascular; changes shape to precisely focus light on retina
diplopia (double vision)
occurs when movements of external muscles of two eyes are not perfectly coordinated
sclera
opaque posterior region of eye; can't see through it, "white" of the eye
Lacrimal secretion (tears)
Dilute saline solution containing mucus, antibodies, and lysozyme
-vascular layer -choroid, cilliary body, iris
Middle pigmented layer of eye, also called uvea What are the 3 regions of this layer?
-special sensory receptors vision, taste, smell, hearing, equilibrium
-What type of receptors do special senses use? -What are the different special senses of the body?
-fibrous layer -sclera, cornea
-outermost layer of eyeball; dense avascular connective tissue -What are the 2 regions?
lacrimal sac
A
photoreceptors, bipolar cells, ganglion cells
What 3 types of neurons is the neural layer of the retina composed of?
vision receptors for bright light; high-resolution color vision
What are some facts about cones?
dim light, peripheral vision receptors; more numerous and more sensitive to light than cones; no color vision or sharp images; numbers greater at periphery
What are some facts about rods?
lens epithelium, lens fibers
What are the 2 regions of the lens?
Choroid supplies outer third (photoreceptors) Central artery and vein of retina supply inner two-thirds
What are the 2 sources of blood supply to the retina?
fibrous layer, vascular layer, inner layer
What are the 3 layers of the eyeball?
eyebrow eyelids conjunctiva lacrimal apparatus extrinsic eye muscles
What are the different accessory structures of the eye?
-close vision and bright light; pupils constrict (diameter decreases) -distant vision and dim light; pupils dilate (diameter increases)
What causes the sphincter pupillae to contract? What does this causes? dilator pupillae?
subject matter is appealing or requires problem-solving skills
What causes to pupils to dilate in regards to changes in the emotional state?
secrete fluid for anterior segment of eyeball
What do the capillaries of ciliary processes do?
-contribute to blinking and tearing reflexes -no (no immune system and can be transplanted without risk of rejection)
What do the pain receptors in the cornea do? Does the cornea have blood vessels?
-accessory structures and eyeball -1/6 -1/2 -fat cushion and bony orbit
What does the eye consist of? What fraction of the eye is visible? How much of the cerebral cortex is involved in visual processing? What is the eye protected by?
tears spread toward medial commissure where they enter the lacrimal canaliculi via lacrimal puncta; tears then drain into the lacrimal sac and then into the nasolacrimal duct, which empties into nasal cavity
What happens to tears when a person blinks?
it swells which constricts ducts and prevents tears from draining (causing "watery" eyes)
What happens to the lacrimal mucosa during a cold/nasal inflammation
-retina -millions of photoreceptor cells that transduce light energy, neurons, glial cells -outer pigmented layer, inner neural layer
What is another name for the inner layer of the eye? What does it contain? What are the 2 layers of the membrane?
-elevates eye and turns it medially -depresses eye and turns it medially
What is the action of the superior rectus? inferior rectus?
hairs that project from eyelids (innervated) that triggers reflex blinking when touched
What is the function of eyelashes?
-overlie supraorbital margins -shade eye from sunlight, prevent perspiration from reaching eye, help with communication/expression
Where are the eyebrows and what are their functions?
-originate from bony orbit and insert on eyeball -follow moving objects, maintain shape of eyeball, and hold it in orbit
Where do the extrinsic eye muscles originate and insert? What do they allow the eye to do?
-originates at common tendinous ring then passes through fibrocartilaginous loop called trochlea and inserts in superolateral part of eye -originates from medial surface and inserts on inferolateral surface
Where does the superior oblique muscle originate and insert? inferior oblique muscle?
strabismus ("cross-eye")
congenital weakness of external eye muscles Eye rotates medially or laterally Eyes may alternate focusing on objects, or only controllable eye is used Brain begins to disregard inputs from deviant eye, which can become functionally blind if not treated early
pinkeye
conjunctival infection caused by bacteria or viruses, highly contagious
lacrimal apparatus
consists of lacrimal gland and ducts that drain into nasal cavity
ciliary zonule
extends from ciliary processes to lens and holds lens in position
chalazion
infected tarsal gland resulting in an unsightly cyst
conjunctivitis
inflammation of the conjunctiva resulting in reddened, irritated eyes
humors
internal cavity filled with fluids in the eye
lacrimal gland
located in orbit above lateral end of eye; secretes lacrimal secretions (tears)
lacrimal caruncle
locating at medial commissure; contains oil and sweat glands
bulbar conjunctiva
membrane that covers white of eyes (not cornea) Small blood vessels found in this membrane; seen easily in "bloodshot" eyes
palpebral conjunctiva
membrane that lines underside of eyelids
tarsal glands
modified sebaceous glands that produce oily secretions that lubricates lid and eye
palpebral fissure
opening between eyelids
choroid
posterior portion of vascular layer
ora serrata
serrated junction between the retina and the ciliary body
pigmented layer of retina
single-cell-thick lining next to choroid; extends anteriorly covering ciliary body and iris
conjunctival sac
space between palpebral and bulbar conjunctiva; area where contact lens rests
tarsal plates
supporting connective tissue that give eyelids shape, as well as anchor orbicularis oculi and levator palpebrae superioris muscles
optic disc
the site where the optic nerve leaves the eye; lacks photoreceptors (the blind spot)
Palpebrae (eyelids)
thin, skin-covered folds that protect eye anteriorly
neural layer of retina
transparent layer that runs anteriorly to margin of ciliary body
conjunctiva
transparent mucous membrane that produces a lubricating muscous secretion
lens
separates internal cavity into anterior and posterior segments
iris
colored part of eye that lies between cornea and lens, continuous with ciliary body (E)
ciliary glands between hair follicles
modified sweat glands of the eye
lacrimal gland
B
ciliary body
anteriorly, choroid becomes this; thickened ring of tissue surrounding lens
pupil
central opening of iris that regulates amount of light entering eye (F)
cataract
clouding of the lens; crystallin proteins clump; consequences of aging, diabetes, mellitus, heavy smoking, frequent exposure to intense sunlight; some congenital; lens can be replaced surgically with artificial lens
