Title: The EYE and the EAR
1The EYE and the EAR
- The eye the ear are sense organs, like the
skin, taste buds, and olfactory centers in the
nose.
2Outer Eye
- The conjunctiva is clear and colorless except
when blood vessels are dilated. Dust and smoke
will cause this and give the eye the bloodshot
eye appearance.
Lacrimal caruncle
Conjunctiva
3EYE
- A normal, healthy cornea is avascular (with no
blood vessels) receives nourishment form blood
vessels near its junction with the sclera. The
function of the cornea is to bend or refract the
rays of light.
4The Inside of the Eye
Macula- yellowish region slightly near the optic
disk, contains the fovea.
The choroid is the middle, vascular dark membrane
of the eye, between the retina the sclera.
Is not constantly reformed, gives shape to eyeball
x
Aqueous Humor
Fovea- small cup-like depressed region is the
center point of clearest vision contains only
cone receptors
- The x shows where the blind spot called the
optic disc is. It is where the nerve meets the
retina. Contains only nerve fibers, no rods or
cones.
5Optic Chiasm
- Chiasm means crossing.
- Point at which fibers of the optic nerve cross in
the brain. - Notice that half of the visual field is projected
to the other side of the brain. - In the occipital lobe the images are fused to
form a single image.
Fibers Cross over
Synapse in the Thalamus
6Hemianopsia- Loss of vision in the contralateral
visual field.
- Contralateral means opposite.
- Damage to nerve cells in the right cerebral
cortex such as in a stroke, will cause a loss of
vision in the left visual field. - Similarly, damage in the left cerebral cortex
will cause a loss in the right visual field.
7Sections of the Retina
- Cones- photoreceptor cells in the retina that are
responsible for color central vision. 6.5
million - Three types of cones Red, Green Blue
- Rods -Photoreceptor cells of the retina that are
essential for vision in dim light and peripheral
vision. 120 million
- These cells relay info to the bipolar
neurons, next to ganglion cells, and at last to
the fibers of the optic nerve.
8Normal Retina
- Intravenous injection of fluorescein (dye) to
take photographs of the retina through the
patients dilated pupils. - Test shows blood flow in the retina, detects
vascular changes for HBP and diabetes, and
identifies lesions of the macular area.
- A normal fluoresein angiogram.
9Detached Retina
- The two layers of the retina separate from each
other. - Trauma, head injuries, bleeding, infection, and
shrinking of the vitreous humor can produce tears
or holes result in separation of the retina. - Treatment used might be photocoagulation to seal
a hole, cryotherapy to burn a scar, and use of a
scleral buckle.
- Patients often see bright flashes of light-
(called photopsia) or black spots called floaters.
10Scleral Buckling
- A procedure to repair retina detachment.
- A strip of sclera is resected, or a fold is made
in the sclera. - An implant is inserted with sutures to hold and
buckle the sclera. - A suture of silicon band pushes the two parts
against each other to bring together the parts of
the detached retina.
11Nyctalopia- Retinitus Pigmentosa
- This is a genetic disorder where pigmented scars
form on the retina and destroys retinal rods.
Decreased vision and night blindness occurs.
12Macular Degeneration
- Picture seen on left has normal vision. Picture
on the right as it would appear to someone with
macular degeneration.
- Progressive damage to the macula of the retina.
- Leading cause of blindness in the elderly.
13Anisocoria
- Condition of uneven pupils.
- Indication of neurological injury or disease.
14Lacrimal Tear Gland Ducts
- Dacryocystitis-inflammation of the tear sac
- Drainage of eye goes into the nose.
15Blepharitis
- Inflammation of the eyelid
- Thickened lids with crusts around the lashes.
16Hordeolum- stye, sty
- Localized, purulent, inflammatory staphylococcal
infection of a sebaceous gland in the eyelid.
- Warm compress to the eye may help open up the
gland.
17Chalazion
- Small, hard, cystic mass on the eyelid
(granuloma) Require incision and drainage.
- Formed as a result of chronic inflammation of a
sebaceous gland along the margin of the eyelid.
18Conjunctivitis
- Commonly called pinkeye.
- Inflammation of the conjunctiva which is the
delicate membrane lining the eyelids and covering
the anterior eyeball.
- Discharge of pus characteristic of highly
contagious condition.
19Blepharoptosis
20Farsightedness- Hyperopia
- The eyeball shape is too short in the adult eye
compared to normal or the lens is too weak.
- Convex lens used to correct.
21Nearsightedness- Myopia
- The shape of the eyeball is too long for the
adult eye compared to a normal eyeball or the
lens is too strong.
- Corrected with a concave lens.
22Astigmatism
- This causes light rays to be uneven and not
sharply focused on the retina so that the image
is distorted. - The correction is with a cylindrical lens.
- Abnormal curvature of corneal surface or shape of
the lens.
23Radial Keratotomy (RK)
- Surgery in which spoke-like incisions are made to
reshape the cornea, thus correcting
nearsightedness. - The first surgery was performed in Russia in
1972. Introduced in U.S. in 1978.
- Shows location of the incisions.
24Appearance of the Eye After Keratoplasty
- Also known as a Corneal Transplant.
- Surgical repair of the cornea results in this
clinical appearance. - This donor cornea is sutured into place after
removal of the original cornea.
25PKR- Photorefractive Keratectomy
- LASIK shapes the tissue below the surface of the
cornea to reshape or flatten the corneal surface
using an Excimer laser.
- The PKR removes tissue from the surface of the
cornea.
26LASIK
- Acronym for laser in situ keratomileusis (shaping
the cornea) - Performed as an outpatient under local
anesthesia. - The surgeon lifts the top of the layer of the
cornea and uses a laser to sculpt the cornea.
- The the corneal flap is repositioned.
- Use of an Eximer Laser to correct refraction
(myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism) and lamellar
keratoplasty. - Differs from PKR because it shapes the corneal
tissue beneath the surface as well as on the
surface like in PKR.
27Corneal Stem Transplants
- Can restore and maintain the clear covering of
the cornea membrane that may have been destroyed
by injury or disease. - Stem cells are harvested from cadavers and
transplanted into and around the edges of a blind
recipient. - This technique is in the research stages and has
some problems with rejection the immune system.
28Glaucoma
- Diagnosed by tonometry applied externally to the
eye with a local anesthetic, - Acute glaucoma has extreme ocular pain, blurred
vision, redness of the eye, and dilation of the
pupil. May cause blindness. - Chronic glaucoma has no symptoms, only a gradual
loss of vision.
Fluid leaves at the angle where cornea iris
meet.
- Glaucoma occurs when the circulation in the
anterior chamber builds up and pressure builds. - Treatment may be with drugs or with laser surgery.
29Slit Lamp Microscopy
- Examination of anterior ocular structures under
microscopic magnification. - Devices attached to a slit lamp expand the scope
of examination,
- Measuring intraocular pressure by tonometry to
detect glaucoma.
30Cataract
- A cataract is a type of degenerative eye disease.
- The protein in the lens clots clouds the
vision. - It is a gradual development of cloudiness within
the lenses, not a film that covers the eye.
- The lens appear cloudy. Often can be seen by the
naked eye.
31Cataract Examples
- Snowflake cataracts are present at birth or
others occur with complications from diabetes
mellitus or from trauma.
- Senile cataracts are linked to the process of
aging.
32Cataract Surgery
- Phacoemulsification- technique of cataract
extraction using ultrasonic vibrations to
fragment (emulsify) the lens and aspirate it from
the eye by use of an ultrasonic probe.
- The surgeon uses a small, self-sealing
scleral-tunnel incision.. - In most patients, an intraocular lens is
implanted at the same time.
33Ophthalmoscopy
- Visual examination of the interior of the eye.
The pupil is dilated and the physician shines the
light into the back of the eye.
34Visual Acuity Vision Field Tests
- The Snellen chart assesses vision by reading a
chart at a distance of 20 feet. - Expressed as a ratio, such as 20/20 (1st tells
distance, 2nd normal person could have read)
- Visual fields are examined by measuring the area
within which objects are seen when the eyes are
fixed, looking straight ahead without turning
head.
35Color Blindness
- People with normal vision will see the number 74.
People with red-green color blindness cannot. - Used to classify red-green if they see the 2
only, the red sensitive cones are abnormal if
they see the 4 only, the green sensitive cones
are abnormal.
36Anatomy of the EAR
- The two functions of the ear are to hear and to
provide the sense of balance.
37Inner Ear Middle Outer Ear
The eustachian tube or auditory tube leads to the
pharynx opens upon swallowing to reduce pressure
in the middle ear and keeps the eardrum from
bulging outward.
38Eardrum- Tympanic Membrane
- A. Healthy tympanic membrane
- B. Tympanic membrane with a cholesteatoma (tumor
of skin cells cholesterol).
Tympanic membrane is derived from the Greek word
for drum.
39Eardrum- Tympanic Membrane
- D. Myringotomy with tympanostomy tube
- C. Acute Otitis Media (severe ear ache)
Placing tubes reduces the pressure.
40Ossicles
- The tiny three bones of the middle ear pick up
the vibrations of the eardrum and transfer the
vibrations onto the inner ear through the oval
window. - Stapes is Latin for stirrup.
41Stapedectomy
- A prosthetic device (wire, Teflon, or metal) is
placed into the incus and attached to a hole in
the oval window.
- Using a microsurgical technique and a laser, the
stapes bone is removed.
Malleus Incus
New device
Oval window
42Inside the Cochlea
- This movement stimulates the hair cells on the
organ of Corti to generate a nerve impulse.
- The vibrations of the oval window cause the
perilymph in the bony labyrinth of the cochlea to
move.
43Cochlear Transplant
- If the hairs of the organ of Corti are damaged,
nerve deafness occurs. - A new surgically implanted device can improve
this form of hearing loss. - A transmitter outside the scalp sends sound info
to a receiver behind the auricle which translates
into an electrical code relayed to directly the
cochlea and its nerve..
44Acoustic Neuroma
- Benign tumor arising from the acoustic
vestibulocochlear nerve (8th cranial nerve) in
the brain. - Causes tinnitus (ringing in the ears), vertigo
(dizziness), and decreased hearing.
45Meniere Disease
- Disorder of the labyrinth of the inner ear marked
by elevated endolymph pressure within the cochlea
and semicircular canals. - Symptoms include, tinnitus, vertigo, nausea, and
headaches. Attacks last for minutes or for hours. - Cause is unknown an treatment is rest and drugs.
46Audiometry
- lt One earphone emits a test sound while the
other emits a masking noise.
47Otoscopy- Visual examination of the ear with an
otoscope.
- The auricle (pinna) is pulled up and back. The
hand holding the scope is placed against the face
for stabilization.
- Ear thermometry using a tympanic membrane
thermometer within 2 seconds.
48The end
- Glaucoma- is Greek glaukos for blue-gray or sea
green, means a morbid condition. - Cataract- is derived from the Greek word for
waterfall, as you would see things through a
watery veil of mist or waterfall.
- Iris- special messenger of the Queen of Heaven
according to Greek mythology. She passed from
heaven to earth over the rainbow while dressed in
rainbow hues.