vision Flashcards

retina: list the main layers, cellular components and synaptic connections of the retina, and explain the basis of phototransduction

1
Q

what and where is the retina

A

very thin layer of tissue lining inner part of eye; blood vessels get thinner as go away from optic disc

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2
Q

retina function

A

captures light rays which are sent to brain via optic nerve

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3
Q

where does optic nerve connect

A

back of eye near macula

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4
Q

what is the optic disc

A

visible portion of optic nerve

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5
Q

where is the physiological blindspot

A

where the optic nerve meets the retina (optic disc), as no light-sensitive cells; brain covers with surrounding visual stimuli

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6
Q

where is the macula located

A

centre of retina, temporal to optic nerve

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7
Q

what is the macula, including colour and size

A

small and highly sensitive part of retina responsible for detailes vision (appreciate detail, read etc.); yellow and 6mm in diameter

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8
Q

what is the very centre of the macula called, and why does it form

A

fovea, forms pit at centre as absence of overlying ganglion layer

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9
Q

cones and rods in fovea, and clinical assessment

A

highest concentration of cones (1:1 ratio with neurones, so photons coming from different sources stimulate different receptors -> distinguish between different light sources; perceive detail), lowest concentration of rods; assessed with optical coherence tomography exam

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10
Q

how many layers in retina

A

3

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11
Q

what is present in outer layer (behind retinal pigment epithelium, which is in contact with choroid -> sclera)

A

photoreceptors (1st order neuron) - cones and rods; light comes in, hits and reflects off retinal pigment epithelium, and then detected

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12
Q

function of outer layer

A

detection of light

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13
Q

what is present in middle layer

A

bipolar cells (2nd order neurons) and horizontal and amacrine cells

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14
Q

function of middle layer

A

local signal processing to improve contrast sensitivity, and to regulate sensitivity

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15
Q

what is present in inner layer

A

retinal ganglion cells (3rd order neurons)

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16
Q

function of inner layer

A

axons of optic nerve transmit signal from eye to brain

17
Q

diagram of retinal structure

A

slide 28

18
Q

2 classes of photoreceptors in retina

A

rod and cone

19
Q

segments of cones and rods

A

nucleus -> inner segment -> connecting cilium -> outer segment

20
Q

disk pathway in photoreceptors

A

proteins synthesised in inner segment -> transported through connecting cilium -> distal migration in outer segment -> shed from tips

21
Q

diagram of cones and rods

A

slide 29

22
Q

outer section: cone vs rod

A

rod has longer outer segment, with photo-sensitive pigment

23
Q

sensitivity to light: cone vs rod

A

rod is 100x more sensitive

24
Q

response to light: cone vs rod

A

cone is much faster response (rod is higher spatial and time summation)

25
Q

type of vision: cone vs rod

A

rod is responsible for night vision (scotopic), peripheral vision and motion, cone is responsible for day light fine vision, central vision and colour vision (photopic vision)

26
Q

number: cone vs rod

A

120 million rods, 6 million cones

27
Q

where is blindspot angle relative to fovea

A

20 degrees

28
Q

where is highest concentration of rod photoreceptors in retina relative to fovea

A

20-40 degrees relative to fovea

29
Q

where is highest concentration of cone photoreceptors in retina relative to fovea

A

0 degrees (at fovea)