eye notes you tube video below e1mvrmwg7i

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Eye Notes You tube video below http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=R E1MvRmWg7I

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Page 2: Eye Notes You tube video below  E1MvRmWg7I

Parts of sight sense• Eyes• Accessory organs

– Eyelids (palpebrae)-thinnest skin• Protect eye

– Canthus-corners of the eye– Eyelashes-hairs that prevent particles from getting into the eye– Conjuctiva-membrane inside eyelids (prevent eyelids from

sticking together)• Conjunctivitis-pink eye

– Lacrimal apparatus-has a gland that produces tears/pink tissue in corner of eye

• Tears have lysozymes-antibacterial enzyme– 6 muscles

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Parts of outer eyeFibrous Tunic-mechanical & physical protectionhelp to focus image

• Cornea-transparent window of the the eye– Focus entering light– Covers colored portion of the eye– Limited repair

• Sclera-white portion of eye– Made of collagen and elastin– Protect eye and attaches muscles

• Optic nerve

Blindness-loss of transparency of corneaCan receive a donor cornea/no blood involvedso successful

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Vascular Tunic (middle eye)

• Regulate amount of light entering the eye• Control shape of lens (an essential part of the focusing process)• Choroid coat

– Vascular and nutritive– Joined to sclera– Melanocytes (pigments)-absorb excess light and keep inside

eye dark (tons of pigments)

• Ciliary body-forms a ring around the eye• Composed of muscles and ligaments• Holds lens in position

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Middle Eye (cont)

• Lens-behind the iris and pupil– Held in place by suspensory ligaments– Ciliary muscles and ligaments help to change its

shape in order to focus• Accomodation

– Relaxation creates flat shape to see distance

– Contraction creates convex shape to see close

• Cataracts-lens become cloudy and opaque– Can cause blindness

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Iris-part of middle eye

• Thin diaphragm of connective tissue and smooth muscle• Colored portion of eye

– Thickness and # pigments determines eye color– More is black, brown colors; less is blue and gray– melanin

• Adjusts the amount of light that enters the pupil – The pupil is the opening at the center of the iris.– Dark part of eye

• Aqueous humor-fluid between cornea and lens– Provides nourishment and maintains shape

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Smooth Muscle Role

• Regulates light by regulating pupil size– Contract-small size so

less light

– Relax-big size so more light

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Glaucoma

• Rate of aqueous humor formation is more than its rate of removal

• Builds pressure on the eye– Blood vessels shut-rob cells of nutrients

• Cells die and may cause blindness

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Inner Eye Parts• Retina

– Photoreceptors– Thin and delicate

– Contains a depression called fovea centralis– This produces the sharpest vision

• Optic Disc– Where nerve fibers leave the eye and join the optic

nerve– Lacks receptor cells-known as blind spot– Vitreous humor-liquid that fills the posterior cavity

• Floaters-when clumps form in this liquid

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Light Refraction (bending of light wave)

• Convex surface of cornea and the lens refracts light and converges the rays onto the retina– Image is upside down and reverse

– Distant objects• Lens thinner, muscles relax, less convex, refract less

– Close objects• Lens thicker, muscles contract, more convex, refract

more

• Visual cortex interprets this image correctly

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Visual Receptors

• Rods– Long and thin

– Provide black and white vision

– More sensitive to light

– Provide vision in dim light

• Cones– Short and blunt

– Color vision

– Sharp image– High in fovea centralis

– Cone numbers decrease as you move away from fovea centralis

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Visual pigments in Rods

Rhodopsin (purple pigment) light sensitiveBreaks down into a protein called opsin

(clear color) , and yellow retinal (made from vitamin A) in the presence of light

Sends nerve impulse to brainIn dim light, opsin and retinal make

rhodopsin

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Visual Pigments of Cones Made of retinal and the opsin protein

There are 3 types of opsin proteins Sensitive to red light Sensitive to green light Sensitive to blue light

The wavelength of light determines the color perceived from it

The color perceived depends upon which sets of cones the light stimulates If all 3 stimulated-white if none are stimulated-black

Colorblindness-lack of cone pigments

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• Nearsightedness-myopia– Concave lens

• Farsightedness-hyperopia– Convex lens

• Ophthalmoscope-used to examine the interior of the eye