Eye muscles Flashcards

1
Q

what are the two groups of ocular muscles

A

intrinsic and extrinsic

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2
Q

what do intrinsic muscles do

A

control pupil diameter and help alter lens curvature to enable us to see near objects

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3
Q

what do extrinsic muscles do

A

move the eye (also known as extraoccular muscles or EOMs)

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4
Q

what are the 6 extrinsic muscles that move the eye and one extrinsic muscle that moves the eyelid

A

4 straight muscles called RECTI:

  • medial rectus
  • lateral rectus
  • inferior rectus
  • superior rectus

2 OBLIQUE muscles:

  • superior oblique
  • inferior oblique

moves eyelid
- Levator palpebrae superioris

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5
Q

where do the recti muscles arise from and insert

A

the apex of the orbit from an annular fibrous ring

insert at the sclera anteriorly

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6
Q

where does the superior oblique muscle arise from and insert

A

the roof of the orbit posteriorly (lesser wing of sphenoid

inserts at sclera posteriorly

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7
Q

where does the inferior oblique muscle arise from and insert

A

the floor of the orbit anteriorly

inserts at sclera posteriorly

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8
Q

what muscle elevates the eyelid

A

levator palpebra superioris

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9
Q

what is the origin of the LPS and where does it insert

A

roof of the orbit

inserts into the upper eyelid

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10
Q

what muscle closes the eyelid

A

obicularis oculi (NOT AN EOM)

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11
Q

what nerve supplies the superior oblique

A

trochlear (IV)

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12
Q

what nerve supplies the lateral rectus

A

abducens (VI)

causes abduction of eye

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13
Q

what nerve supplies all other extrinsic eye muscles

A

occulomotor (III)

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14
Q

What does RADSIN stand for

A

Recti ADduct

Superiors INtort

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15
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the medial recuts

A

adduction

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16
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the lateral rectus

A

abduction

17
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the superior rectus

A
  1. elevation
  2. adduction
  3. intorsion
18
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the inferior rectus

A
  1. depression
  2. adduction
  3. extorison
19
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the superior obliques

A
  1. introrsion
  2. depression
  3. abduction
20
Q

What are the actions on the eye of the inferior obliques

A
  1. extorsion
  2. elevation
  3. abduction
21
Q

what is strabismus

A

squint - misalignment of the eyes

22
Q

what are the two types of squint

A
  1. esotropia (manifest convergent squint)

2. exotropia (manifest divergent squint)

23
Q

what are the 2 functional consequences of squint

A
  1. amblyopia (lazy eye) - brain suppress image of one eye leading to poor vision in that eye (no pathology)
  2. diplopia (double vision) - usually occurs in squints occurring as a result of nerve palsies
24
Q

what are the three intrinsic muscles of the eye

A
  1. ciliaris muscle (in ciliary body)
  2. constrictor pupillae (in iria at pupillary border)
  3. dilator pupillae (radially running muscle in iris)
25
Q

what innervates the ciliary muscle

A

parasympathetic oculomotor (III) nerve

26
Q

what innervates the constrictor pupillae

A

parasympathetic oculomotor (III) nerve

27
Q

what innervates the dilator papillae

A

sympathetic plexus around blood vessels

28
Q

what is the pupillary reaction to increased light

A

parasympathetic innervation = both pupils constrict

29
Q

what is the pupillary reaction to decreased light

A

sympathetic innervation = both pupils dilate

30
Q

what is the AFFERENT limb pathway of the light reflex

A

light falls on retina - impulses travel along optic nerve - optic chiasma - optic tract

fibres don’t go to the lentiform geniculate body - instead leave optic tract and go straight to midbrain (oculomotor III nucleus)

part of III nucleus is the Edinger-westphal nucleus for parasympathetic fibres -

31
Q

what is the EFFERENT limb pathway of the light reflex

A

from EWN (part of III nucleus) - preganglionic parasympathetic pass through III into orbit

parasympathetic fibres for to and synapes in ciliary ganglion

post ganglionic fibres go through short ciliary nerves to constrictor pupillae

pupillary constriction of BOTH EYES

32
Q

what are 2 examples of pupil abnormalities

A
  1. pupils may be different size - anisocoria e.g. corners syndrome
  2. pupils may look normal but react abnormally to light (abnormal light reflex)
33
Q

what can cause absent/abnormal pupillary reflexes

A
  1. any abnormality of the afferent limb/ centre / efferent limb of the reflex
  2. diseases of the retina - detachment, degeneration, dystrophy
  3. diseases of the optic nerve - e.g. optic neuritis in MS
  4. diseases of the III cranial nerve (efferent limb)
34
Q

what must you check for if there is a III nerve palsy due to a medical cause e.g. diabetes

A

medical cause = no damage to parasympathetic fibres

check pupillary reflex - if absent - suspect cerebral artery aneurysm = EMERGENCY

35
Q

what is anisocoria that occurs in horners syndrome

A

damage to the sympathetic innervation of the pupil - causes pupil to be unable to dilate in dark conditions

36
Q

what is the triad of eye symptoms in horners syndrome

A

anisocoria - pupils different size

ptosis - drooping of eyelid on affected side

anhidrosis - loss of sweating on the affected side

37
Q

what can cause horners syndrome

A

any disruption along sympathetic chain innervation - e.g. pancoasts tumour of the lung

(thoracolumbar outflow, sympathetic chain, cervical ganglia, postganglionic sympathetic fibres travelling with blood vessels in head and neck)