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Layers of the eyeball • The most pathetic person in the world is someone who has sight, but has no vision. – Helen Keller Eye and camera • Both deal with similar sets of issues • Maintaining a stable relationship between a focusing apparatus and a focusing apparatus • Focusing on near and far objects • Regulating the amount of light reaching the photosensitive surface • Recording the pattern of incoming light General features • Image focusing system, composed of 1. Cornea 2. Lens 3. Refractive media • Internally black- prevents ‘scatter effect’ • In front of iris – anterior chamber • Behind the iris – posterior chamber • Refractive media enclosed in 3 coats 1. Fibrous [sclera, cornea] 2. Vascular/uveal coat [choroid, ciliary body, iris] 3. Nervous [retina] Sclera[‘white of the eye’] • Posterior 5/6ths • Opaque - composed of dense collagen and elastic fibres • Thinnest at equator • Pierced by recti muscles • Thickest at back, except where pierced by fibres of CN II [lamina cribrosa] • ‘cupping’ of optic disc= posterior bulging of disc in sustained ↑in intraocular pressure • Blends with dura mater • Continues posteriorly as the sheath of CN II • Site of muscle insertion • Pierced by ciliary nerves and arteries, venae vorticosae • Almost avascular, except where connected to fascial sheath of eye and bulbar conjunctiva Cornea • Limbus is a transition zone between sclera and cornea • Beginning from limbus, cornea forms anterior 1/6th of fibrous coat • Transparent fibrous tissue laminae • Avascular [no transplant rejection] Layers 1. Corneal epithelium 2. Bowman’s membrane /anterior limiting membrane; scattered collagen fibrils and ground substance 3. Corneal stroma/substantia propria • 200 collagen fibril lamellae • Scattered fibroblasts • Transparency because of lattice arrangement 4. Descemet’s membrane /posterior limiting membrane 5. Corneal endothelium Nerve supply • Short and long ciliary nerves • Mainly short ciliary • Corneal reflex pathway; short ciliary nerves→ trigeminal ganglion→ main CN V sensory nucleus→ reticular formation→ both CN VII motor nuclei [both orbicularis oculi muscles act] Uvea/uveal tract • Heavily vascularised • Similar to arachnoid and pia • Principal route through which blood vessels and nerves [other than CN II] • Components \ choroid, ciliary body, iris CHOROID • Thin, pigmented • Outer layer separated from sclera by suprachoroid lamina [delicate connective tissue] • Inner layer firmly attached to pigmented layer of retina • Rods and cones nourished by choroidal capillaries • Venae voricosae [4-5] drain choroid- exit through sclera Ciliary body • • • • Continuous with choroid behind and iris in front Like a flat ring applied to inner scleral surface Thick in front, thin behind Triangular ;2 lond sides in contact with sclera and vitroeus • Attachment of iris halfway along flat anterior short base • Ciliary muscle in scleral surface • Vitreous surface – bilayered epithelium [outer pigmented, inner nonpigmented] • Layers represent pigment and nervous layers of retina • Scleral surface projected into70-80 ciliary processes that lie in reciprocal grooves on anterior surface of vitreous body Iris • Attached at periphery to anterior surface of ciliary body and a narrow rim of sclera to form iridocorneal angle of anterior chamber • Perforated centrally by pupil • Main bulk- vascular connective tissue connective tissue • Amount of melanin granules increases from anterior to posterior • Amount of pigment increases with age • Color is variable in different individuals Sphincter pupillae • Circular smooth muscle • Supplied from Edinger – Westphal nucleus of CN III Dilator pupillae • Radial smooth muscle • Supplied by cervical sympathetics • Preganglionic neurons lie in T1 segment of spinal cord Trabecular meshwork and scleral venous sinus Lens • • • • Transparent, biconvex More convex posteriorly Transparent ,elastic capsule Posteriorly rests on vitreous, anteriorly in contact with iris • 10 mm dia., 4 mm thick • Centrally , single layer of cubical cells • Peripherally , cells elongate to produce fibres • Increase in length leads to increase in lens substance Suspensory ligament/zonule • Series of delicate fibrils attached to ciliary processes and through the furrows between them, further back on ciliary body • Most fibres attach themselves to the lens- mostly in front and a few behind the circumference • Holds lens flattened under tension • Contraction of ciliary muscle→ forward displacement of choroid and ciliary body • This relieves some tension exerted by zonule on the lens; makes it more globular→ increased refractive power [Accomodation] • • • • • Delicate Outer surface in contact with choroid Inner surface in contact with vitreous Ora serrata- anterior limit of light ssensitive area Beyond ora serrata- thin light insensitive layer continues as epithelial layers of ciliary body and iris Retina - components 1. Retinal pigment epithelium 2. Neural retina Retinal pigment epithelium • Outer layer • Simple cuboidal melanin-containing cells • Firm attachment to choroid via Bruch’s membrane [thin refractile layer –multilaminar] Neural retina • Contains light – sensitive receptors [ rods and cones] + complex neuronal networks • Potential space exists between neural retina and RPE • Layers can be separated mechanically • Eye disease or trauma also leads to separation [Retinal detachment] Components of neural retina • Nonvisual part; anterior to ora serrata- lines inner aspect of ciliary body and posterior surface of iris • Photosensitive /visual part; lines inner surface of eye posterior to ora serrata, except where it is pierced by CN II Optic disc • • • • 1.5 mm dia. Site of entry of CN II Overlies lamina cribrosa of sclera Deepened to a variable degree to form a ‘physiological’ cup • Insensitive to light – ‘blind spot’ Fundus • Disc and whole of surrounding area at the back of the eye seen with ophthalmoscope Macula lutea – • yellowish shallow depression, avascular • 3mm lateral to optic disc Fovea centralis • • • • • Shallow central pit in macula Thinnest area of retina Avascular No rods High concentration of cones=site of most acute vision Arrangement • Outer layer- pigmented cells attached to choroid • Not a firm attachment • In retinal detachment- pigmented cells remain in position; rods and cones and other layers displaced onwards Physiological arrangement • Similar to any sensory pathway • 1st order neuron – bipolar cell – peripheral process connected to rods and cones • Synapses with 2nd order neurons – ganglion cell • Passes to thalamus [lateral geniculate body] which has 3rd order neurons • Axons pass through retrolentiform part of internal capsule to visual cortex