Chapter 124: Eye Flashcards

1
Q

What is the primary function of the eyelids?

A

Protect the ocular surface.

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2
Q

What (4) functions do the eyelids perform to protect the ocular surface?

A

Provide mechanical barrier
Secrete lipid portion of tear film
Sweep away foreign bodies
Spread tear film and direct it to puncta

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3
Q

Which eyelid (superior or inferior) is more mobile in dogs and cats?

A

Superior

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4
Q

What muscle lowers the inferior eyelid?

A

Malaris mm.

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5
Q

What (4) muscles raise the superior eyelid?

A

Levator anguli oculi
Levator palpebrae superioris
Müller’s
Frontalis

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6
Q

What sphincter-like muscle brings the eyelids together?

A

Orbicularis oculi

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7
Q

Levator palpebrae superioris and Müller’s are the only muscles of the eyelid not controlled by the facial nerve, what is their innervation?

A

Oculomotor (3)

Sensory to lids and cornea is all Trigeminal

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8
Q

What ligaments stabilize the eyelid commisures?

A

Medial and lateral canthal ligaments (also prevent fissure from being circular).

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9
Q

Why do ophthalmic surgeons like the conjunctiva?

A

It is redundant/abundant and rather loosely adhered - easy to biopsy and graft with.

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10
Q

What are the four parts of the conjunctiva?

A

Palpebral
Bulbar/palperbral sides of the nictitans
Conjunctival fornix
Bulbar conjunctiva

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11
Q

Lymphoid follicles in the conjunctiva are found where?

A

Tenon’s capsule / the substantia propria subadjacent to the epithelium.

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12
Q

From a surgical standpoint, the most important property of the conjunctiva is its’ what?

A

Sectility - consistency that allows it to be cut smoothly with a knife.

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13
Q

What are the two planes of the conjunctiva?

A

Between epithelium and Tenon’s capsule (grafts from here)
Deeper between Tenon’s capsule and the sclera (tumor resection and transconjunctival enucleation).

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14
Q

Care must be taken to be gentle with the conjunctiva. What are some (6) ways to do so?

A

Use fine forceps: Castroviejo, Bishop-Harmon, Colibri
Fine suture (5-0 to 7-0)
Continuous pattern to minimize knots
Short tags/buried knots
Avoid sutures
Pocket technique - sutures on palpebral side of nictitans

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15
Q

Many corneal diseases appear surgical, but may be better treated medically or with neglect, why?

A

Scarring is actually less and cornea transparency is important for vision.

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16
Q

What is normal corneal thickness in dogs and cats?

A

0.5mm

17
Q

How thick is the nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium of the cornea?

A

6 cells

18
Q

What are the four layers of the cornea?

A

Epithelium
Stroma (thickest)
Descemet’s membrane
Endothelium

19
Q

Why is cornea transparent (6 reasons)?

A

Nonkeratinized
lack of vessels
lack of pigment
perfect alignment of stromal lamellae
smooth surface from tear film
relative dehydration

20
Q

Corneal innervation is supplied by what nerves?

A

Long ciliary nerves, from trigeminal

*Most branches are in anterior stroma/epithelium - maybe why superficial ulcers hurt more

21
Q

True or false? Dolichocephalic dogs and cats have higher corneal sensitivity/nerve fiber density compared to brachycephalics.

A

True.

22
Q

Dogs and cats have what type of orbit?

A

Open - the bony rim is incomplete.

23
Q

What (2) tissues are part of the orbit?

A

Muscles of mastication and soft palate

24
Q

What is the periorbita?

A

Fibrous connective tissue that surrounds the orbit and forms a cone that surrounds the extraocular muscles.

It is continuous with the dura of the optic nerve caudally and Tenon’s capsule rostrally.

25
Q

Lesions inside and outside the periorbita are called what?

A

Intraconal
and
Extraconal

26
Q

Where is the zygomatic salivary gland located?

A

The rostral, ventrolateral quadrant of the orbit