"Hey Doc, I Can`t See!" - Ophthalmology 101 for Primary Care
... constricts to let more or less light into the eye. ...
... constricts to let more or less light into the eye. ...
Case 6 Phlyctenulosis - Pennsylvania Optometric Association
... membrane traction; the epiretinal membrane pulls the inner portion of the fovea toward the center causing the foveal contour to steepen into a holelike configuration. - The outer nuclear layer and the photoreceptor layer are preserved; VA 20/4020/60 - Lamellar hole is a subcategory of pseudo-hole in ...
... membrane traction; the epiretinal membrane pulls the inner portion of the fovea toward the center causing the foveal contour to steepen into a holelike configuration. - The outer nuclear layer and the photoreceptor layer are preserved; VA 20/4020/60 - Lamellar hole is a subcategory of pseudo-hole in ...
Nucleotides in the Eye: Focus on Functional Aspects and
... surface consists of two distinct layers: an outer lipid layer produced by meibomian glands and an inner layer containing a mixture of mucins, glycoproteins, and different aqueous components such as electrolytes and glucose, together with other proteins (lysozyme and lactoferrin, among others). The a ...
... surface consists of two distinct layers: an outer lipid layer produced by meibomian glands and an inner layer containing a mixture of mucins, glycoproteins, and different aqueous components such as electrolytes and glucose, together with other proteins (lysozyme and lactoferrin, among others). The a ...
PAROTID GLANDS - Chennai City Branch Of ASI
... Dr.K.Kuberan M.S Professor of surgery Govt.Royapettah Hospital ...
... Dr.K.Kuberan M.S Professor of surgery Govt.Royapettah Hospital ...
Neuroscience 9b – Vestibular Apparatus and Pathways
... crystals known as otoconia. The nerve endings in the hair cells can be one of two types: – Type I: chalice-like endings form ribbon synapses – Type II: simple nerve terminals Hair cells are mechanical transducers detecting static tilt and acceleration. When the head is moved the hairs on the hair ce ...
... crystals known as otoconia. The nerve endings in the hair cells can be one of two types: – Type I: chalice-like endings form ribbon synapses – Type II: simple nerve terminals Hair cells are mechanical transducers detecting static tilt and acceleration. When the head is moved the hairs on the hair ce ...
sympathetic ophthalmia - M.M.Joshi Eye Institute
... • Multiple areas of Early Hyperfluorescence and leakage at the level of the RPE (Dalen-Fuchs nodules) and the choroid (choroidal granuloma) in most cases, very similar to those seen in Harada's disease. • These sites (“window defects”) correspond to the Dalen-Fuchs nodules observed clinically. Pres ...
... • Multiple areas of Early Hyperfluorescence and leakage at the level of the RPE (Dalen-Fuchs nodules) and the choroid (choroidal granuloma) in most cases, very similar to those seen in Harada's disease. • These sites (“window defects”) correspond to the Dalen-Fuchs nodules observed clinically. Pres ...
The Physiology of the Senses: Balance
... turning. During a prolonged head rotation (20sec or by eye rotation in the other, resulting in a more), the elasticity of the cupula gradually restores stationary image on the retina. it to its upright position. The drive to the VOR stops and, if your eyes are closed, you falsely sense that you are ...
... turning. During a prolonged head rotation (20sec or by eye rotation in the other, resulting in a more), the elasticity of the cupula gradually restores stationary image on the retina. it to its upright position. The drive to the VOR stops and, if your eyes are closed, you falsely sense that you are ...
SWS (blue) cone hypersensitivity in a newly identified retinal
... a circular area of retina of angular subtense 25° centered 36° temporally and 15° superiorly in the retina of patient 2. Details of the IFR, which is based upon a Zeiss 30° fundus camera to which a TV system has been optically and mechanically coupled, have been given elsewhere.8-9 Experimental meth ...
... a circular area of retina of angular subtense 25° centered 36° temporally and 15° superiorly in the retina of patient 2. Details of the IFR, which is based upon a Zeiss 30° fundus camera to which a TV system has been optically and mechanically coupled, have been given elsewhere.8-9 Experimental meth ...
Essentials of Biology Sylvia S. Mader
... Similar Receptors in Other Animals • Gravitational equilibrium in invertebrates is provided by statocysts, which provides information about the position of the head relative to the body. • The lateral line of fish senses changes in water pressure and currents. ...
... Similar Receptors in Other Animals • Gravitational equilibrium in invertebrates is provided by statocysts, which provides information about the position of the head relative to the body. • The lateral line of fish senses changes in water pressure and currents. ...
Visual Impairments - Michigan Crossroads Council
... Albinism: This is an inherited condition in which the individual has decreased pigment that causes abnormal optic nerve development. As well as having a decreased visual acuity, these children may also be sensitive to light. Tinted lenses, glasses and low vision aids can all help to decrease light s ...
... Albinism: This is an inherited condition in which the individual has decreased pigment that causes abnormal optic nerve development. As well as having a decreased visual acuity, these children may also be sensitive to light. Tinted lenses, glasses and low vision aids can all help to decrease light s ...
references - isa kanyakumari
... bulbar hemorrhage occurring due to vascular injuries during sinus or nasal surgery is another cause for it. Retinal micro-emboli are common during open heart surgery.[4] Paradoxical embolism originating from an operative site and reaching arterial circulation through a Patent foramen ovale has been ...
... bulbar hemorrhage occurring due to vascular injuries during sinus or nasal surgery is another cause for it. Retinal micro-emboli are common during open heart surgery.[4] Paradoxical embolism originating from an operative site and reaching arterial circulation through a Patent foramen ovale has been ...
Decreased retinal ganglion cell number and misdirected axon
... with heritable optic nerve atrophy in humans. In this article, the authors present adult and developmental studies on the retinal phenotype in Bst/+ mice. Methods. Retinal ganglion cells in adult Bst/ + mice were labeled retrogradely with horseradish peroxidase injected into the right optic tract. L ...
... with heritable optic nerve atrophy in humans. In this article, the authors present adult and developmental studies on the retinal phenotype in Bst/+ mice. Methods. Retinal ganglion cells in adult Bst/ + mice were labeled retrogradely with horseradish peroxidase injected into the right optic tract. L ...
Intra ocular Tumours Associate Professor Polkinghorne Learning
... be associated with a serous retinal detachment and have typical features on B scan ultra-sound. Conversely choroidal naevi are flat and small, and may have drusen present. Having said that some choroidal naevi can undergo malignant transformation, implying continued observation is appropriate. Overa ...
... be associated with a serous retinal detachment and have typical features on B scan ultra-sound. Conversely choroidal naevi are flat and small, and may have drusen present. Having said that some choroidal naevi can undergo malignant transformation, implying continued observation is appropriate. Overa ...
Special Sensory Reception
... the vestibule and semicircular canals – Sound energy is converted in air to pressure pulses which stimulate hair cells along the cochlear spiral – The frequency (pitch) of the percieved sound is determined by which part of the cochlear duct is stimulated – The intensity (volume) is determined by how ...
... the vestibule and semicircular canals – Sound energy is converted in air to pressure pulses which stimulate hair cells along the cochlear spiral – The frequency (pitch) of the percieved sound is determined by which part of the cochlear duct is stimulated – The intensity (volume) is determined by how ...
Special Senses - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... 33-10 Describe the anatomy of the ear and the function of each part. 33-11 Describe various disorders of the ear. 33-12 Explain how sounds travel through the ear and are interpreted in the brain. 33-13 Explain the role of the ear in equilibrium. ...
... 33-10 Describe the anatomy of the ear and the function of each part. 33-11 Describe various disorders of the ear. 33-12 Explain how sounds travel through the ear and are interpreted in the brain. 33-13 Explain the role of the ear in equilibrium. ...
Eye and Ear
... Deafness is significant or total hearing loss. Sensorineural deafness occurs by impairment of hair cells or damange of the cochlear branch of the (XIII) cranial nerve. Sensorineural deafness can occur due to atherosclerosis, which decreaes blood supply to the ears, or by loud noise which destroys th ...
... Deafness is significant or total hearing loss. Sensorineural deafness occurs by impairment of hair cells or damange of the cochlear branch of the (XIII) cranial nerve. Sensorineural deafness can occur due to atherosclerosis, which decreaes blood supply to the ears, or by loud noise which destroys th ...
Frequently Asked Questions
... My doctor says my retinal detachment was repaired, but I still can’t see. The retina’s rods and cones (the light sensitive cells) align precisely with their underlying retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. Nowhere is this relationship more important than in the macular region. With separation of t ...
... My doctor says my retinal detachment was repaired, but I still can’t see. The retina’s rods and cones (the light sensitive cells) align precisely with their underlying retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. Nowhere is this relationship more important than in the macular region. With separation of t ...
Morning glory syndrome: a histopathological study
... radiate peripherally in a sometimes striking straight course from below the central white tissue, are most probably the normally more peripherally situated branches after their second ramification. In MGS they are more centrally located by the retrodisplacement of the optic nerve head, which was 4 m ...
... radiate peripherally in a sometimes striking straight course from below the central white tissue, are most probably the normally more peripherally situated branches after their second ramification. In MGS they are more centrally located by the retrodisplacement of the optic nerve head, which was 4 m ...
View/Open
... Immunohistochemistry for ciliary marker in E16.5 (A, B) and P5 (C–E) C57BL/6J mouse eye. (A) Cx43-positive staining is observed in the lens epithelium, CE (NPE and PE), gap junctions between PE (arrows) and NPE (arrowheads), and RPE. (B) AQP1-positive staining is observed in the NPE and cornea. (C) ...
... Immunohistochemistry for ciliary marker in E16.5 (A, B) and P5 (C–E) C57BL/6J mouse eye. (A) Cx43-positive staining is observed in the lens epithelium, CE (NPE and PE), gap junctions between PE (arrows) and NPE (arrowheads), and RPE. (B) AQP1-positive staining is observed in the NPE and cornea. (C) ...
Comparison of Human Corneal Cell Cultures in Cytotoxicity Testing
... human cornea, the stromal tissue is located between the outermost stratified epithelium and the innermost monolayer of specialised endothelial cells. In in vivo experiments with rabbit corneas, Jester et al. (1998) identified quantifiable differences in the distinct corneal layers for surfactants pr ...
... human cornea, the stromal tissue is located between the outermost stratified epithelium and the innermost monolayer of specialised endothelial cells. In in vivo experiments with rabbit corneas, Jester et al. (1998) identified quantifiable differences in the distinct corneal layers for surfactants pr ...
CET Characteristics of normal and abnormal pupils – Part 1 1 CET POINT
... The fourth neuron leaves the ciliary ganglion ...
... The fourth neuron leaves the ciliary ganglion ...
Bitemporal Hemianopia Caused by Retinal Disease
... We describe a patient with a nonprogressive bitemporal hemianopia caused not by optic chiasmal dysfunction but by retinal disease that was diagnosed by multifocal electroretinography (mfERG) after results from neuroimaging studies were repeatedly normal. Report of a Case. A 67-year-old woman with a ...
... We describe a patient with a nonprogressive bitemporal hemianopia caused not by optic chiasmal dysfunction but by retinal disease that was diagnosed by multifocal electroretinography (mfERG) after results from neuroimaging studies were repeatedly normal. Report of a Case. A 67-year-old woman with a ...
TOXOPLASMOSIS OF THE EYE
... Most young children will feel their vision to be ‘normal’ as they have never known anything else but their own visual world. At first they assume that everyone else has vision the same as their own. They do not realise that other people see things differently. ...
... Most young children will feel their vision to be ‘normal’ as they have never known anything else but their own visual world. At first they assume that everyone else has vision the same as their own. They do not realise that other people see things differently. ...
Photoreceptor cell
A photoreceptor cell is a specialized type of neuron found in the retina that is capable of phototransduction. The great biological importance of photoreceptors is that they convert light (visible electromagnetic radiation) into signals that can stimulate biological processes. To be more specific, photoreceptor proteins in the cell absorb photons, triggering a change in the cell's membrane potential.The two classic photoreceptor cells are rods and cones, each contributing information used by the visual system to form a representation of the visual world, sight. The rods are narrower than the cones and distributed differently across the retina, but the chemical process in each that supports phototransduction is similar. A third class of photoreceptor cells was discovered during the 1990s: the photosensitive ganglion cells. These cells do not contribute to sight directly, but are thought to support circadian rhythms and pupillary reflex.There are major functional differences between the rods and cones. Rods are extremely sensitive, and can be triggered by a single photon. At very low light levels, visual experience is based solely on the rod signal. This explains why colors cannot be seen at low light levels: only one type of photoreceptor cell is active.Cones require significantly brighter light (i.e., a larger numbers of photons) in order to produce a signal. In humans, there are three different types of cone cell, distinguished by their pattern of response to different wavelengths of light. Color experience is calculated from these three distinct signals, perhaps via an opponent process. The three types of cone cell respond (roughly) to light of short, medium, and long wavelengths. Note that, due to the principle of univariance, the firing of the cell depends upon only the number of photons absorbed. The different responses of the three types of cone cells are determined by the likelihoods that their respective photoreceptor proteins will absorb photons of different wavelengths. So, for example, an L cone cell contains a photoreceptor protein that more readily absorbs long wavelengths of light (i.e., more ""red""). Light of a shorter wavelength can also produce the same response, but it must be much brighter to do so.The human retina contains about 120 million rod cells and 6 million cone cells. The number and ratio of rods to cones varies among species, dependent on whether an animal is primarily diurnal or nocturnal. Certain owls, such as the tawny owl, have a tremendous number of rods in their retinae. In addition, there are about 2.4 million to 3 million ganglion cells in the human visual system, the axons of these cells form the 2 optic nerves, 1 to 2% of them photosensitive.The pineal and parapineal glands are photoreceptive in non-mammalian vertebrates, but not in mammals. Birds have photoactive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-contacting neurons within the paraventricular organ that respond to light in the absence of input from the eyes or neurotransmitters. Invertebrate photoreceptors in organisms such as insects and molluscs are different in both their morphological organization and their underlying biochemical pathways. Described here are human photoreceptors.