Vision 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two types of ocular muscle?

A

Intrinsic and extrinsic

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2
Q

What are the functions of intrinsic ocular muscles?

A

Controlling pupil diameter, altering lens curvature to enable short range focus

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3
Q

What is the function of extrinsic ocular muscles?

A

Moving the eye

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4
Q

What are the four straight extrinsic ocular muscles?

A

Medial, lateral, superior and inferior rectus

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5
Q

What are the two oblique extrinsic muscles?

A

Superior and inferior oblique

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6
Q

Where do the recti muscles arise from?

A

The apex of the orbit from an annular fibrous ring called the trochlea

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7
Q

Where does the superior oblique muscle arise from?

A

The roof of the orbit posteriorly

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8
Q

Where does the inferior oblique arise from?

A

The floor of the orbit anteriorly

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9
Q

What muscle runs above the SR elevating the eyelid?

A

Levator palpebrae superioris

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10
Q

What nerve innervates the superior oblique?

A

Tochlear

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11
Q

What nerve supply the lateral rectus?

A

Abducent

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12
Q

What nerve supples the majority of the muscles of the eye?

A

Oculomotor

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13
Q

What is the action of the superior rectus?

A

when the eye is abducted the SR causes elevation

When the eye is adducted the SR causes intorsion

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14
Q

What is the action of the inferior rectus?

A

When the eye is abducted the IR causes depression

When the eye is adducted the IR causes extortion

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15
Q

What is the action of the superior oblique?

A

When the eye is adducted the SO causes depression

Overall it causes intorsion, depression, abduction

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16
Q

What is the action of the inferior oblique?

A

When the eye is adducted the IO causes elevation

Overall, the IO causes extorsion, elevation, abduction

17
Q

What should looked for in suspected right third nerve palsy?

A

Drooping eyelid, eye only has full movement laterally

18
Q

What should be looked for in suspected left fourth nerve palsy?

A

Eye moving up when adducted

19
Q

What should be looked for in suspected abucent nerve palsy?

A

Eye being adducted, eye not able to adduct

20
Q

What is strabismus?

A

Squint

21
Q

What are the two kinds of strabismus?

A

Esotropia - convergent

Exotropia - divergent

22
Q

What is amblyopia?

A

Lazy eye - where the brain suppress the image of one eye leading to poor vision in that eye without any pathology

23
Q

What is diplopia?

A

Double vision - usually occurs in squints occurring as a result of nerve palsies

24
Q

Describe the visual field

A

Everything that can be seen with one eye, including the periphery

25
Q

In what orientation do images form on the retina?

A

Upside down, they are inverted in the retina

26
Q

Describe the optic pathway

A

All fibres from the eye pass through the optic nerve tot he optic chiasm
At the chasm the medial nasal fibres cross to the opposite side
So the optic tract contents fibres from the lateral/temporal half of the ipsilateral eye and the crossed-over fibres from the contralateral side
This corresponds to all fibres from the opposite side of the visual field
Fibres from the optic tract synapse at the LGB (lateral geniculate body) of the thalamus
From here the optic radiation passes behind the internal capsule (retro-lentiform) to reach the Primary Visual Cortex area in the Occipital lobe

i.e. the right visual cortex sees the let half of the visual field and vice versa

27
Q

What would be the effect of a lesion to the right optic nerve?

A

Blindness in the right eye

28
Q

What would be the effect of the optic chasm being disrupted in the middle?

A

Bitemporal hemianopia

29
Q

What would the effect be of a right optic tract lesion?

A

Contralateral homonymous hemianopia

30
Q

What would the effect of damage to the optic radiation?

A

Contralateral homonymous hemianopia

31
Q

What are the intrinsic muscles of the eye?

A

Ciliaris
Constrictor pupillae - circular
Dilator pupillae - radial

32
Q

Does increased illumination lead to a parasympathetic or sympathetic response?

A

Parasympathetic - pupils contract

33
Q

Does decreased illumination lead to a parasympathetic or sympathetic response?

A

Sympathetic - pupils dilate

34
Q

Do the fibres relating to pupillary reflex activation use the same pathway as the normal fibres?

A

No, they do not go to the LGB but instead leave the optic tract to go to the midbrain where the IIIn nucleus is situated. Part of it is the EWN for parasympathetic fibres. The fibres go to both sides of the EWN

35
Q

What is anisocoria?

A

Pupils of differing size

36
Q

Describe the efferent pathway of the light reflex

A

From the EWN nucleus, preganglionic fibres pass through IIIn into the orbit. Parasympathetic fibres go to synapse at the ciliary ganglion. Postganglionic fibres go through short ciliary nerves to constrictor pupilae = pupillary constriction on both sides

37
Q

What is Horner’s syndrome?

A

Anisocoria due to damage to the sympathetic innervation to the pupil - therefore affected pupil constricted