The Retina + The Central Visual Pathway Flashcards

1
Q

What are the layers of the eye?

A

Sclera - tough + continuous with dural sheath of optic nerve
Choroid - pigmented vascular layer
Retina - neural layer

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2
Q

Role of the pigmented layer of the retina

A
  • main site of absorption of light
  • prevents light from ‘bouncing around’ in eyeball causing glare
  • anchors the photoreceptor cells
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3
Q

What are the 2 different types of photoreceptors?

A

Rods
Cones

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4
Q

Function of rods

A

Black and white vision

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5
Q

Function of cones

A

Coloured vision
High acuity vision
Central vision at macula

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6
Q

Role of bipolar cells in retina

A

Act to connect photoreceptor cells to axons

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7
Q

Role of horizontal cells in retina

A

Lateral inhibition
inhibits photoreceptors cells on either side of photoreceptor receiving impulses

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8
Q

What is amaruosis fugax?

A
  • due to occulsion of central retinal artery (branches from Opthalamic artery)
  • Presentation of ‘curtain coming down over vision’
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9
Q

What is amaurosis fugax a symptom of?

A

Stroke
Occlusion of central retinal artery

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10
Q

A patient tells you they fell like a ‘curtain is falling over their vision, what is the most likely cause?

A

Amaurosis fugax
Occlusion of central retinal artery
Symptom of stroke

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11
Q

What is the layout of the retina in fundoscopy?

A

Macula sits lateral to optic disc
Central retinal artery + vein can be seen

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12
Q

Examples of conditions that can be detected by fundoscopy

A
  • hypertensive retinopathy
  • diabetic retinopathy
  • macular degeneration
  • papilloedma
  • vascular occlusions
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13
Q

What can be used to view the layers of the retina?

A

Optical coherence tomography

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14
Q

Why is the macula the point of highest visual acuity?

A

Highest concentration of cones

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15
Q

What are the parts of the retina?
What are they called?

A

medial retina - nasal
lateral retina - temporal
superior + inferior

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16
Q

What are the parts of the visual pathway?

A
  • optic nerve
  • optic chiasm
  • optic tract
  • lateral geniculate nucleus
  • superior optic radiation via parietal lobe + inferior optic radiation via temporal love
  • primary visual cortex
17
Q

Difference between fibres in the optic nerve + tract

A
  • optic nerve: only fibres from ipsilateral eye
  • optic tract: fibres from both eyes | contralateral nasal fibres | ipsilateral temporal fibres
18
Q

Outline the visual pathway

A
  • optic nerve consists of ipsilateral nasal and temporal fibres
  • at the optic chiasm nasal fibres decussate
  • optic tract consists of contralateral nasal + ipsilateral temporal fibres
  • lateral geniculate nucleus
  • superior optic radiation takes superior quadrant fibres to primary visual cortex via parietal lobe
  • inferior optic radiation takes inferior quadrant fibres to primary visual cortex via temporal lobe
19
Q

What are the two routes to the primary visual cortex from the lateral geniculate nucleus?

A
  • superior optic radiation via parietal lobe | superior quadrant fibres
  • inferior optic radiation via temporal lobe | inferior quadrant fibres
20
Q

What field of vision are nasal fibres responsible for?

A

Temporal field of vision

21
Q

What field of vision are temporal fibres responsible for?

A

Nasal field of vision

22
Q

List 5 types of visual loss

A
  • monocular blindness
  • bitemporal hemianopia
  • homonomous hemianopia
  • homonomous inferior quadrantanopia
  • homonomous superior quadrantanopia
23
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the optic nerve cause?

A

Monocular blindness
- Loss of vision in one eye
- Contains fibres from ipsilateral side

24
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the optic chiasm cause?

A

Bitemporal haeminaopia
- Loss of both temporal visual fields
- Due to nasal fibres on both sides affected

25
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the optic tract cause?

A

Homonomous hemianopia
- loss of ipsilateral nasal visual field + contralateral temporal visual field
- i.e. left side of both eyes or right side of both eyes

26
Q

What do the inferior retinal fibres detect?

A

Superior quadrant field of vision

27
Q

What do the superior retinal fibres detect?

A

Inferior quadrant field of vision

28
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the superior optic radiation cause?

A

Homonomous inferior quadrantanopia
- Loss of ipsilateral inferior nasal visual field
- Loss of contralateral inferior temporal visual field

29
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the inferior optic radiation cause?

A

Homonomous superior quadrantanopia
- Loss of ipsilateral superior nasal visual field
- Loss of contralateral superior temporal visual field

30
Q

What type of visual loss does damage to the both optic radiation or the lateral geniculate nucleus cause?

A

Homonomous hemianopia
- like lesion in optic tract
- loss of ipsilateral nasal visual field
- loss of contralateral temporal visual field

31
Q

You see a patient with albinism who complains that he is unable to see well in bright sunlight. Why is this?

A
  • Albinism causes reduced pigmentation in eyes > iris translucent
  • This allows excessive light to enter the eyes
  • causing sensitivity to bright sunlight > photophobia
32
Q

A patient suffers from homonymous hemianopia caused by a stroke.
How might we determine whether the lesion is in the optic tract or the visual cortex?

A
  • optic tract lesion is not macula sparing
  • visual cortex lesion is macula spaing - because it has a dual blood supply