Exam 2 Vision Flashcards

1
Q

Is cornea and lens vascular or avascular?

A
  • Avascular
  • light bending is the main thing so you can focus it on retina
  • blood will mess up the bending of light–>since its avascular it gets its nurtrients from aqueous humor
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2
Q

What is the distance between successive waves?

A

Wavelength

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3
Q

What is the number of waves per second?

A

Frequency

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4
Q

What is the difference between wave trough and peak?

A

Amplitude

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5
Q

When the frequency is higher the wavelength is?

A

Lower

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6
Q

What wavelengths can we see? Vissible light

A

400 nm to 700 nm

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7
Q

What are the three layers of tear film?

A

Posterior layer rich in glycoproteins

—Derived from conjunctival goblet cells

Watery middle layer

—Secreted by lacrimal tissues

Anterior oily layer

—Produced by meibomian glands and the glands in the eyelids

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8
Q

What are the three purposes of tear film?

A

1) Protect
2) Bending of light in cornea and focusing it on retina
3) Keeps it from drying out

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9
Q

What is the main function of the cornea?

A

to protect eye and relfect light

-it cant be directly opened to external environment

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10
Q

What two structures present a tough physical barrier to trauma and infection and protects the internal structures of the eye.

A

Sclera and Cornea

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11
Q

•The cornea refracts light.

–The refractive power of the cornea depends on the ________ of light at the air-cornea interface.

-If air is replaced with something that passes light at about the same speed as the eye, the refractive power of the cornea will be eliminated.

A

slowing

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12
Q

–The cornea provides ______ of the refractive power in the eye.

-The cornea has a refractive power of about ________. Parallel light rays striking the corneal surface will be focused 0.024 meters behind it. This is about the distance from the cornea to the ________.

A

1) most
2) 42 diopters
3) retina

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13
Q

What are the three functions of aqueous humor?

A

–Maintains a stable pressure

–Feeds avascular tissue

–Maintains clear vision (liquid has to be clear in order for light to pass through)

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14
Q

What allows light to pass through lens?

A

The iris

•The iris functions like the diaphragm in a camera to increase or decrease the amount of light entering the eye.

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15
Q

–If an aperture is wide, then ______ rays are admitted, resulting in a ______ focus only for parallel rays with a certain focal length.

*more light

–If an aperture is narrow, then only a _______ number of parallel rays pass through, resulting in a ______ focus at the focal plane and for a distance before and after the focal plane.

*less light

A

1) many, sharp
2) small, sharp

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16
Q

•F-number = focal length / aperture diameter

–F-number (f-stop) of the eye is the ratio of the focal length of the eye (from cornea to retina) and physical aperture (pupil opening).

For a clear picture you want?

A

F number to go up

–Each smaller F-number doubles the area of the opening and therefore doubles the amount of light entering the camera, and reduces the depth of field.

17
Q

–Wide apertures have ____ depths of field (not as clear)

-Narrow apertures have _____ depths of field (clear)

A

1) Small
2) large

•The F-number gets larger, the aperture gets smaller and the depth of field gets larger.

18
Q

What is the iris innervation?

A
19
Q

What is the function of the lens?

A
  • The function of the lens is to focus light on the retina
  • The shape of the lens can change in order to enable accommodation.
20
Q

What are the steps in accomadation?

A

1) The ciliary muscles contract.
2) Suspensory ligaments attached to the lens relax.
3) The lens becomes more spherical due to its inherent elasticity.
4) The curvature of the lens surface increases.
5) The refractive power of the lens increases.
6) Objects up close come into focus.

21
Q

What are the other changes occurring during accommodation?

A

The eyes converge.

The pupils constrict which increases the depth of field.

22
Q

Example: when the left eye is stimulated, neither pupil constricts, as no signals reach the brain from the left eye due to its damaged optic nerve

Example: when the left eye is stimulated, only the right pupil constricts

A

The ipsilateral direct reflex is lost

23
Q

Example, because light shone into the right eye can signal to the brain, causing constriction of both pupils via the normal oculomotor nerves

A

The ipsilateral consensual reflex is intact

24
Q

Example, Because light shone into the right eye can signal to the brain, causing constriction of both pupils via the normal oculomotor nerves

Example, Because light shone into both eyes can still signal to the brain, and the pupil on the undamaged side will still be able to constrict via its normal oculomotor nerve

A

•The contralateral direct reflex is intact

25
Q

Example, because light shone into the eye on the damaged side cannot signal to the brain; therefore, despite the right eye’s motor pathway (oculomotor nerve) being intact, no signals from the left eye are able to stimulate it due to the damage to the sensory pathway (optic nerve) of the left eye)

A

•The contralateral consensual reflex is lost

26
Q

Example: when the right eye is stimulated, only the right pupil constricts

A

•The ipsilateral consensual reflex is lost

27
Q

Example, because light shone into the left eye can still signal to the brain via the normal optic nerve, causing attempted constriction of both pupils; the contralateral pupil constricts via its normal oculomotor nerve, but the ipsilateral pupil is unable to constrict due to its damaged oculomotor nerve

A

The contralateral consensual reflex is intact