Chapter 49 Flashcards

1
Q

What do convex lenses do to light passing through? How about concave lenses?

A
  • Convex lenses converge light rays onto a single point (the focal point)
  • Concave lenses diverge light rays
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2
Q

What is the definition of a focal point?

A

the distance beyond a convex lense at which parallel ray converge to a common point

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3
Q

What is the formula for determining focal point?

A

1/f = 1/a + 1/b

f= focal length

a= distance of the light point source

b= distance of the focal point on the other side of the lens

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4
Q

What is a diopter a measue of?

A

-refractory power

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5
Q

What is the equation to calculate diopters?

A

Diopter= 1meter / focal length

-e.g. focal length of .5m has a diopter of +2 and 0.1 has a diopter of +10

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6
Q

When is a diopter a negative value?

A
  • When the focal point is in front of the lens (concave lenses).
  • e.g. is concave cylindrical leses
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7
Q

In a relaxed state, what is the shape of the lense?

A

Flattened

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8
Q

What is the role of suspensory ligaments in the control of lens shape?

A
  • Attach to the anterior border of the choroid and retina
  • pull the lens edges towards the outer circle of the eyeball
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9
Q

What are the two sets of ciliary muscles?

A
  • meridional
  • circular fibers
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10
Q

What do the meridional muscles cause when they contract?

A

-They pull the insertion of the suspensory ligament closer to the origin and release tension on the lens

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11
Q

What is the role and action of the circular portion of the ciliary muscles?

A
  • act like a sphincter decreasing the diameter of the circle of ligaments
  • again releasing tension on the ligaments and lens
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12
Q

How is the ciliary muscle controlled?

A

-almost entirely by parasympathetics riding on CNIII

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13
Q

What is presbyopia? What causes it?

A
  • a progressive inability to focus on near objects
  • caused by a progressive thickening and inelasticity of the lens which, in old age, eventually leads to the inability of the lens to change shape at all (0 diopters)
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14
Q

What are the two roles of the pupil?

A
  • control the amount of light entering the eye
  • increase depth of focus by constricting
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15
Q

What is the name for ‘normal’ vision?

A

-emmetropia

(from greek emmetro meaning ‘well-fiting’)

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16
Q

What does it mean to have emmetropic vision?

A

Means that distant parallel light rays are focused sharply on the retina when the ciliary muscle is completely relaxed

17
Q

What condition is known as far-sightedness? What are some characteristics?

A
  • hyperopia
  • caused by an eyeball that is too short for the lens system or a lens that is too weak
  • parallel light rays are focused behind the retina
18
Q

Can a person correct for hyperopia?

A
  • yes
  • the lens can relax (accomodate) to bring the focal point onto the retina
19
Q

What is near-sightedness? What are some characteristics?

A
  • Myopia
  • eyeball that is too long or a lens that has too much refractive power when relaxed
20
Q

Can a person with myopia compensate for their deficit?

A
  • no
  • a person with myiopia has a definite ‘far point’ beyond which they are unable to focus
21
Q

How does one correct for myopia?

A

By placing a concave lens infront of the eye to diverge the incoming rays before they enter the eye.

22
Q

What is a stigmatism? How is it corrected?

A
  • When light rays passing through an eye have different focal points at perpendicular planes.
  • with AWESOME physics: First the focal point of one plane is determined using a set of black bars to focus on (looks like a clock), then that is held constant while the other plane is determined and corrected for.
23
Q

What is a cataract?

A

-denatured proteins which form a cloudy or opaque area in the lens

24
Q

Hoe are cataracts corrected?

A

-surgical removal and replacement with either a plastic implant lens or very powerful convex lenses

25
Q

How is visual acuity interpreted?

A

comparison to the distance that a normal person can see what you can see at 20

  • 20/20
  • 20/200 (you can see at 20 feet what a normal person can see at 200 feet)
26
Q

How does a person have depth perception from sizes of retinal images of known objects?

A

-Brain learns how big an object is, therefore a person can estimate the distance of an objuect based on the size of the image projected on the retina

27
Q

What does moving paralax have to do with depth perception?

A

-when a person moves their head, images that are closer move by quickly while distant objects remain almost stationary

28
Q

What is the name for binocular vision?

A

Steropsis

29
Q

How does steropsis contribute to depth perception?

A

-at close range, the image reaching each eye is slightly different the brain uses this to calculate an objects distance and therefore 3D

30
Q

What is the sole method for depth perception at close range? Does it work at long range?

A
  • Stereopsis (binocular vision)
  • useless beyond 50-200 feet depending on the person
31
Q

What is the location of the aqueous humor? What about the vitreous humor? Which one is receycled and regulates IOP?

A
  • The aqeuous humor lies infront of the lens and is constantly formed and resorbed (therefore regulates IOP)
  • The vitreous humor lies between the back of the lens and the retina and is not made or resorbed
32
Q

Trace the path of aqueous humor through the eye:

A

-Ciliary processes–> in front of lens–> around pupil into anterior chamber–> corneal angle–> canal of schlemm–> extraocular veins

33
Q

What happens if a patient has a hemorrhage or some other event that relases proteins and other solid substances into the eye?

A

-Glaucoma

34
Q

How does Glaucoma cause blindness?

A

-Compression of the optic nerve or compression of the retinal artery