Week 1 Anatomy and Disease of Orbit Study Questions Flashcards

1
Q

What species have complete bony orbits

A

cow, horse, pig, primates

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2
Q

What species have incomplete bony orbits, and what compromises the rim of the orbit in these species

A

carnivores (dogs & cats) - orbital ligament

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3
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Ventral Rectus

A

CN III (oculomotor)
-inserts into sclera near or slightly anterior to the equator of the globe
-functions to rotate globe vertically acting antagonistically with the dorsal rectus

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4
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Lateral Rectus

A

CN VI (abducent)
-inserts into sclera near or slightly anterior to the equator of the globe
-functions to rotate globe horizontally acting antagonistically with the medial rectus

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5
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Dorsal Oblique

A

CN IV (trochlear)
-originates near optic foramen, passes through trochela along the medial orbital wall to insert into the sclera laterally near insertion of lateral rectus muscle
-functions to provide intorsion (rotate dorsal globe medially)

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6
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Ventral Oblique

A

CN III (oculomotor)
-originates from the medial orbital wall
-inserts by muscular insertion!! deep to the lateral rectus insertion
-provides extorsion (rotates dorsal globe laterally)

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7
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Retractor Bulbi

A

CN VI (abducent)
- originates within orbital fissure
- inserts into posterior sclera of the globe
- retracts the globe, well developed in herbivores

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8
Q

what is the innervation, origin, insertion and action on the globe of Levator Palpebral Superioris

A

CN III (oculomotor)
- originates near dorsal rectus next to orbital fissure
- inserts in a broad band to upper tarsus
- elevates lateral 2/3 of upper eyelid, intimate connection to dorsal rectus

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9
Q

what is buphthalmos and what causes it

A

globe enlargement (ex glaucoma)

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10
Q

what is exophthalmos and what causes it

A

increased protrusion of the globe

causes:
-neoplasia
-hemorrhage
-cellulitis/abscess
-mucocele
-myositis

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11
Q

why is oral examination important when evaluating orbital disease?

A

swelling/fistulas in the mouth, oral pain can narrow differentials

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12
Q

what is enophthalmos and what causes it

A

retraction of globe into orbit

causes:
-dehydration
-cachexia
-increased extraocular muscle tone
-atrophy of orbital fat
-loss of periorbita (neoplasia in cats)
-loss of retro-orbtial muscle mass

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13
Q

unilateral enophthalmos is caused by

A

neoplasia, atrophy of orbital fat

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14
Q

bilateral enophthalmos is caused by

A

a systemic condition- dehydration, cachexia

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15
Q

what is microophthalmos

A

congenitally small globe +/- vision

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16
Q

what is phthisis bulbi

A

shrunken globe without vision associated with chronic intraocular disease

17
Q

what are the possible initiating causes of orbital cellulitis/abscess

A

extension into orbit from adjacent periorbital infection (tooth root abscess, sinus infection) or migrating plant foreign body

18
Q

Cellulitis differentials

A

common in dog, not in cat
unilateral presentation with non-painful 3rd eyelid prolapse
acute onset
pain on opening of mouth
pyrexia & leukocytosis
swelling/fistula in roof of mouth behind last upper molar

19
Q

neoplasia differentials

A

middle-aged to older animals
unilateral
gradual onset
slow progression

20
Q

what is the difference between primary and secondary orbital neoplasia

A

primary originates in orbit
secondary has metastasis/extension from continguous structures

21
Q

what is the species breakdown between primary and secondary orbital neoplasia

A

dog - 90% malignant, 75% primary
cat- 90% malignant, 15% primary (MOSTLY SECONDARY!)
Horse- malignant, secondary (SCC!)

22
Q

what breeds of dogs are predisposed to orbital proptosis

A

PEKINGESE! or any brachycephalic with shallow orbits

23
Q

how are proptosis treated?

A

enucleation or replace

24
Q

what are the common complications associated with proptosis?

A

corneal ulcer - no corticosteroids!
KCS sicca
lateral strabismus
blindness

25
Q

what are the principles of treating proptosis

A

you can always take it out but you cant put it back

always lube globe before stabilizing patient