7 Vision Flashcards

1
Q

A minimum of how many neurons are needed for vision?

A

3- photoreceptor, bipolar cell, ganglion cell

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2
Q

What type of neurons generate graded potential?

Action potential?

A

Photoreceptors & Bipolar cell

Ganglion Cell

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3
Q

What phagocytoses the outer segments of photoreceptors and converts all-trans-retinal back to 11-cis retinal?

A

Retinal pigment epithelium

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4
Q

What leads to increased intraocular pressure?

A

decreased aqueous humor outflow

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5
Q

Homonymous visual defects suggests lesions where?

A

behind the optic chiasma

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6
Q

Altitudinal defects suggest lesions where?

A

in the eye

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7
Q

where is the primary site of injury in diabetic retinopathy and atherosclerotic disease?

A

retinal vasculature

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8
Q

What is the major site of injury in macular degeneration?

A

choroidal circulation

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9
Q

T-F – vision is not important to all patients?

A

False

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10
Q

T-F – eye disorders are very common?

A

True

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11
Q

T-F – the eye is a window to many physiologic systems?

A

True

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12
Q

What physiological systems are represented by an eye exam? [4 of them]

A

CNS (II, III, IV, V, VI and SNA)
Vascular System
Endocrine System
Immune System

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13
Q

What are the 5 components of vision?

A
Pointing the eye
Focusing
Adjusting Exposure
Converting image to impulses
Transmit impulse to brain and interpreting them
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14
Q

Focusing of light is accomplished by the combination of what two structures?

A

Cornea and lens

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15
Q

Refractive power is provided by what structure?

A

Cornea (75%)

Lens (25%)

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16
Q

What structure allows one to adjust the focus for accommodation?

A

Lens

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17
Q

T-f? The degree to which the focal length of the lens can be changed increases with age?

A

False- it decreases with age

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18
Q

T - F - cornea and lens are vascular?

A

False

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19
Q

What is the inner surface of cornea and both surfaces of lens bathed in for oxygen/nutrient purposes? Synthesized by what?

A

aqueous humor- synthesized by non pigmented epithelium on ciliary body. (Superficial layer)

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20
Q

What is the second most common blindness in the world? Caused by what?

A

glaucoma- trabecular meshwork is impeded, aqueous humor outflow is low, intraocular pressure increases and damages optic nerve

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21
Q

Opacification of lens is called what?

A

Cataract

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22
Q

paraSNA does what to pupils?

A

constricts pupillary sphincter and causes constriction

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23
Q

SNA does what to the pupil?

A

innervates radial dilator muscles to dilate the pupil

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24
Q

What 2 afferent signals cause paraSNA activity to the pupil?

A

Light falling on the retina

fixating on a near target

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25
Q

What nucleus is stimulated in CNS when para SNA is activated?

A

edinger westphal nucleus in midbrain

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26
Q

Axons of edinger westphal travel in what CN?

A

III—> ciliary ganglion—>short ciliary nerves—>
ciliary body for accommodation or
pupillary sphincters

27
Q

How do you test for a relative afferent pupillary defect or Marcus-Gunn pupil?

A

Bright light at one eye at a time

28
Q

T-F — the pupils are different in size in a pure afferent defect?

A

False– the are always EQUAL

29
Q

T-F — previous trauma to one iris prevents one from looking for an afferent defect?

A

False- because you can observe either eye for an efferent response

30
Q

T-F — the pupil response is largely affected by media opacities such as cataract or blood?

A

False

31
Q

T-F– Unilateral efferent defects result in unequal pupils?

A

True

32
Q

T-F—uncal herniation results in dialated unresponsive pupil?

A

True- compresses CNIII as it leaves the midbrain
[HOWEVER, PATIENTS HERNIATING ARE USUALLY COMATOSE, patients with blown up pupils probable have had a pharmaco agent or atropine exposure.]

33
Q

Where does the sympathetic pupilomotor system begin?

A

neurons in the hypothalamus

34
Q

Sympathetic pupilomotor nerves exit what 3 spinal nerves?

A

T1,2,3,—> ascend and synapse in cervical ganglion

35
Q

T-F —SNA nerves synapse in the ciliary ganglion?

A

False–they just pass through and join paraSNA on short ciliary fibers

36
Q

Injury to the SNA between hypothalamus and orbit will result in what?

A

Horner’s Syndrome

37
Q

What is the reason for several steps in photransduction?

A

amplification

38
Q

The end result of photo cascade is what?

A

closure of sodium channels—this is why the water tank analogy can account for it.

39
Q

What type of receptor is rhodopsin?

A

G coupled protein and light is the ligand

40
Q

What must the rhodopsin protein have bound to it to be sensitive to light?

A

vitamin A derivative- 11-cis retinal—which is isomerized to all trans by photon capture

41
Q

T-F – the visual cycle or conversion back to 11-cis-retinal occur outside the photoreceptor?

A

True

42
Q

What is the G protein in the phototransduction cascade?

A

transducin

43
Q

How are Na+ channels kept open in the dark?

A

cGMP molecules

44
Q

What is the overall phototransduction pathway?

A

Light—> activated rhodopsin—> activated transducer—> activated PDE—>hydrolysis of cGMP—>closure of Na+ channels—> hyperpolarization

45
Q

The photoreceptors synapse on bi polar cells and use what as the neurotransmitter?

A

glutamate

46
Q

What do bipolar cells do?

A

conduct the graded output of photoreceptors to the ganglion cells—-> ganglion cells become first to generate AP

47
Q

Where does re-isomerization occur of 11-cis-retinal?

A

retinal pigment epithelium

48
Q

What is the 2nd major function of retinal pigment epithelium?

A

phagocytose outer segments of photoreceptors

49
Q

What is the most common cause of severe visual loss in the developed world?

A

macular degeration- lipofuscin accumulations within and beneath the RPE

50
Q

The face of the retina nearest the center of the eye is supplied by what vessel?

A

central retinal vessels (vessels seen in the opthalmascope)

51
Q

The face of the retina near the sclera is supplied by what vessel?

A

choriocapillaris anastamosing network beneath the RPE

52
Q

What is the choriocapillaris derived from?

A

posterior ciliary arteries

53
Q

What is the area bounded by the temporal vascular arcades is known as the ?

A

Macula

54
Q

Point of fixation in the center of the macula is known as the?

A

fovea

55
Q

What is the structural specialization of the macula?

A

division of the temporal retinal blood supply into a superior and inferior division

56
Q

Vascular occlusions of the retinal vessels have what effect on the visual field?

A

horizontal effect

57
Q

What is necessary for complex perception of depth?

A

signals from both eyes need to converge on single cortical area

58
Q

Where are axons of the retinal ganglions cells are sorted so that the axons carrying info from the temporal field of one eye travel with axons that carry information from the nasal field of the other?

A

optic chiasma— complex perception of depth

59
Q

Injury to visual pathways behind the chasm cause visual defects that affect what?

A

same side of vertical meridian–homonymous visual field defects

60
Q

Altitude visual defects suggest?

A

disease inside the eye

61
Q

unilateral visual defects suggest?

A

disease anterior to chiasm

62
Q

bitemporal visual defects suggest?

A

disease at the chiasm

63
Q

homonymous field defects suggest disease?

A

behind the chiasm