Ocular Anatomy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Ocular Anatomy

Description:

A Vision Teacher s Guide The Human Eye Eyelid In addition to tear spreading, the eyelid is primarily responsible for corneal nutrition Also provides protection to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:258
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: wcbviK12
Category:
Tags: anatomy | ocular

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Ocular Anatomy


1
Ocular Anatomy
  • A Vision Teacher s Guide

2
The Human Eye
3
Eyelid
  • In addition to tear spreading, the eyelid is
    primarily responsible for corneal nutrition
  • Also provides protection to cornea
  • Lashes offer additional protection

4
(No Transcript)
5
Lacrimal System/Tear Film
  • Lacrimal system is responsible for tear
    production and drainage
  • Made up of 3 layers
  • Created primarily by lacrimal apparatus and
    meibomian glands
  • Lubricate the eyeball, provides oxygen/nutrition
    for cornea, has antibacterial properties and
    helps wash away debris
  • Also have unique composition which keeps surface
    of cornea slick

6
Lacrimal System
7
Cornea
  • Made up of 5 layers
  • Specialized Transparent Tissue
  • No blood vessels
  • Primarily responsible for refracting light
  • Does more of the job than the lens
  • More nerve endings than anywhere else in the body
  • Protection to the eye
  • The only part of the eye that is transplanted
    from one person to another

8
(No Transcript)
9
Aqueous humor
  • Fills space between cornea and iris
  • Continuously produced by ciliary body
  • Flows into chamber through the pupil
  • Drains from eye through trabecular meshwork to
    canal of schlemm
  • Nourishes the cornea and lens
  • Gives front of eyeball form and shape
  • Anterior chamber is area between the cornea and
    the iris filled with aqueous
  • Posterior chamber is the area behind the iris and
    in front of the lens filled with aqueous

10
(No Transcript)
11
Limbus
  • Juncture between the cornea and the sclera
  • Nourishes peripheral corneaassists in corneal
    wound healing
  • Pathway for aqueous outflow (contains trabecular
    meshwork and canal of schlemm)

12
(No Transcript)
13
Conjunctiva
  • Thin translucent mucous membrane starts at the
    limbus and covers the sclera and inner surface of
    the eyelid
  • Has some responsibility of tear production
  • Subject to infectionproblems from contact lens
    use
  • Can be degraded by environmental conditions heat,
    wind, dust, etc.

14
(No Transcript)
15
Sclera
  • Whites of the eye
  • Made up of 3 layers
  • Tough, fibrous tissue site of extra-ocular
    muscle attachment
  • Opaque...allows no light to enter
  • Subject to inflammation

16
(No Transcript)
17
Iris
  • The colored part of the eyeunique to every
    individual like a fingerprint
  • Color is dependent on the amount of pigment
  • A diaphragm, the iris has tiny muscles that
    control the light levels in the eye
  • Has 2 layers
  • Pupil is located in the center of the iris
  • pupil hole it is not an eye structure per se

18
(No Transcript)
19
Lens
  • Transparent, biconvex structure, held in place by
    ciliary zonules
  • Composed of 6 layers
  • Refracts light
  • Nutrition comes from aqueous humorinsoluble
    deposits of proteins build up over time
    cataracts
  • A clouding of the lens and capsule
  • Live long enough and you WILL have some degree of
    cataract
  • cataracts also caused by other agents

20
(No Transcript)
21
Ciliary body
  • Connects the choroid with the iris
  • Has three parts including
  • The ciliary muscle is ring shaped muscle that
    controls the shape of the lens (accommodation)
  • The ciliary process is the attachment site for
    the zonules and produces the aqueous in the pars
    plicata
  • The ciliary ring is attached to the choroid and
    is composed of the pars plana. The pars plana has
    no known function in the post-fetal eye thus this
    is a safe area through which surgical instruments
    may be inserted

22
(No Transcript)
23
Zonules
  • Attach the lens to the ciliary body
  • May become broken or stretched causing the lens
    to move out-of-place

24
(No Transcript)
25
Vitreous
  • A thick, transparent gel like substance that
    fills the center of the eyeball, giving it form
    and shape
  • A canal runs through the vitreous from optic disk
    to the lens. It is a developmental leftover from
    the hyaloid artery. Usually regresses but may
    persist and result in floaters
  • May see reference to hyaloid membrane. This
    transparent tissue surrounds the vitreous and
    separates it from the retina
  • Central retinal veins and arteries extend in
    bundles, exit and enter respectively through the
    optic nerve

26
(No Transcript)
27
Choroid
  • A brown vascular sheet lying between the sclera
    and the retina
  • This is the blood supply for the retina

28
(No Transcript)
29
Retina
  • Most internal layer of eye, facing the vitreous
  • Converts light energy into electrical energy
    which is then sent to the brain via the optic
    nerve
  • Actually an extension of brain tissue
  • Composed of 10 layerscontains photoreceptors
    cones, near center (responsible for seeing detail
    and color) and rods, in periphery (responsible
    for seeing in low light and seeing movement)
  • Point of sharpest vision is in the fovea located
    in the center of the macula

30
(No Transcript)
31
Ora Serrata
  • A serrated juncture between the retina and
    ciliary body marking the transition between
    non-sensitive tissue and the retinal portion with
    many layers and specialized photoreceptor cells

32
(No Transcript)
33
Intra-ocular muscles
  • Purpose is to move eyes
  • Maintain binocularity
  • 6 muscles
  • medial rectus (MR)moves the eye toward the nose
  • lateral rectus (LR)moves the eye away from the
    nose
  • superior rectus (SR)primarily moves the eye
    upward and secondarily rotates the top of the eye
    toward the nose
  • inferior rectus (IR)primarily moves the eye
    downward and secondarily rotates the top of the
    eye away from the nose
  • superior oblique (SO)primarily rotates the top
    of the eye toward the nose and secondarily moves
    the eye downward
  • inferior oblique (IO)primarily rotates the top
    of the eye away from the nose and secondarily
    moves the eye upward

34
(No Transcript)
35
Optic Nerve
  • Purpose is for energy transmission to brain
  • Subject to underdevelopment, damage, inflammation
  • Contains over 1 million nerve fibersonce severed
    cannot be reconnectedno eye transplant
  • Upon examination only the head can be seen by
    doctor. Should appear as yellowish pink, flat
    and with distinct margins
  • The cup to disk ratio is evaluation as a measure
    of healthincrease in size of cup may indicate
    elevated pressure

36
(No Transcript)
37
Optic Nerve Pathways/Visual Cortex
  • Message is carried down the optic nerve through
    pathways to occipital cortex here vision becomes
    sight
  • At the optic chiasm, the nasal nerve fibers
    cross temporal nerve fibers go straight back to
    cortex this arrangement impacts on visual fields
  • Results in visual field losses can be predicted
    based on where damage is located on the optic
    nerve
  • When damage is located anterior of the optic
    chiasm it is likely there will be a cortical
    component to the field loss

38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com