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canthus
angle where the eyes meet
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tarsus
provides stiffness of the eye giving shape
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conjunctiva
provides protective layering
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what are the three layers of the eye?
- sclera: white part of the eye; maintains shape, tough fibrous tissue
- chroid: middle layer that contains many blood vessels
- retina: sensitive and innermost layer; receives nerve impulses and transmits them to the brain
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anterior chamber vs. posterior chamber
- anterior chamber: behind the cornea, in front of the iris
- posterior chamber: behind the iris, in front of ligaments
ANTERIOR SEGMENT MAKES UP 1/3 OF THE EYE FILLING IT WITH AQUEOUS HUMOR
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posterior segment
makes up 2/3 of the eyeball filling it with vitreous humor that contains millions of fibers.
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rods vs. cones
- rods: black and white
- cones: color
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macula
light sensitive area in the center of the retina
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fovea centralis
middle pit of macula and contains ONLY CONES, no rods since it has high concentrations of color
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optik disc
"blind spot" NO CONES AND RODS
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uvea
pigmented layer of the eye
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ciliary body
located in chroid layer, set of muscles that adjust thickness of lens to focus.
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iris
colorful circular structure that surrounds the pupil; controls amount of light passing through by contracting muscles
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cornea
focuses light rays entering the eye
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pupil
black circular opening which permits light to enter the eye
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accommodation
process whereby the eyes make adjustments for seeing objects at various distances
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convergence
inward movement of the eyes towards each other
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emmetropia
normal relationshpi between the refractive POWER for the eye and the SHAPE of the eye that enables light rays to focus correctly on the retina
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refraction
ability of the lens to bend light rays so they focus on the retina
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visual acuity
ability to distinguish object details and shape at distance
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ptosis
drooping of the upper eye lid due to paralysis
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chalazion
nodule or cyst usually on the upper eye lid
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ectropion
eversion of the eyelid; turning it outwards
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entropion
inversion edge of the eyelid; inward eyelid
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hordeolum
"stye" pus filled and painful lesion on the eye
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periorbital edema
swelling of the tissues surrounding the eye(s)
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subconjunctival hermorrhage
bleeding between the conjunctiva and the sclera
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uveitis, iritis
inflammation of the uvea
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corneal abrasion
scratch to cornea
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diabetic retinopathy
damage to retina due to complication of DM
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anioscoria
condition where the pupils are unequal in size
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cataracts
loss of transparency of the lens that causes a progressive loss of visual clarity
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floaters (vitreous floaters)
particles of cellular debris that float in the vitreous humor casting shadows
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photopsia
presence of what appears to be flashes of light
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miosis
contraction of pupil in response to light, prescription of illegal drugs
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mydriasis
dilation of the pupil caused by injury, disease or drugs
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nystagmus
involuntary, constant movement of the eyeball.
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papilledema (choked disc)
swelling and inflammation of the optic nerve at point of entrance through optical disc
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retinitis pigmentosa
progressive degeneration of the retina that affects night and peripheral vision.
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glaucoma
group of diseases characterized by increased intraocular pressure that damages the retinal nerve fibers and optic nerve. BLOCKAGE OF FLOW OUT OF THE EYE.
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open angle glaucoma (chronic)
trabecular mesh is gradually blocked causing pressure
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closed angle glaucoma (acute)
fluid cannot reach trabecular mesh causing pressure in the front of the eye
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macular degeneration
progressive condition where macula is damaged, resulting in loss of vision; not blind.
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hemianopia
blindness in one half of the visual field
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monochromatism
color blindness
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nycatalopia
night blindness
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photophobia
excessive sensitivity to light causing headache
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presbyopia
change in vision relating to aging
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strabismus
disorder in which the eyes point in a different direction or are not aligned correctly
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refractive disorder
focusing problem that occurs when lens and cornea do not bend light
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ametropia
images do not focus properly on the retina
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astigmatism
uneven curvatures of the cornea causing inability to focus
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amblyopia
dimness of vision; partial loss
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scotoma
"blind spot" abnormal diminished vision surrounded by an area of normal vision.
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snellen chart
chart measures visual acuity
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diopter
unit of measurement of the lens' refractive power
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PERRLA
Pupils are Equal, Round, Responsive, to Light and Accomodation
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enucleation
removal of the eyeball
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concave lens
inward; for myopia, nearsighted
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convex lens
for hyperopsia; farsighted
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retinopexy
used to reattach the detached area in a retinal detachment
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OUTER EAR
- pinna (auricle): external portion of the ear
- external auditory canal: transmits sound waves to tympanic membrane
- cerumen: earwax
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MIDDLE EAR
- tympanic membrane: eardrum
- mastoid process: temporal bone containing hollow air space that surrounds the middle ear.
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auditory ossicles
- malleus; hammer
- incus; anvil
- stapes; stirrup
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eustachian tube
auditory tube; equalizes air pressure
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INNER EAR
- LABYRINTH
- oval window; vibrations enter through here
- cochlea; sound vibrations are converted into impulses
- organ of Corti; receives vibrations and relays them to auditory nerve fibers.
- semicircular canals
- acoustic nerves
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air conduction
sound waves enter the ear through the pinna and travel down the external auditory canal then strike the eardrum
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bone conduction
eardrum vibrates and causes the auditory ossicles of middle ear to vibrate.
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sensorineural conduction
sound vibrations reach the inner ear.
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barotrauma
pressure related condition caused by change in altitude; flying in an airplane, driving in the mountains.
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cholesteatoma
epidermal cyst in the middle composed of epithelial cells and cholesterol
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otosclerosis
ankylosis of the bones of the middle ear; conductive hearing loss
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menieres disease
rare chronic disorder in which the amount of fluid in the inner ear increases intermittently.
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tinnitus
ringing, buzzing in the ear.
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presbycusis
gradual loss of sensorineural hearing
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conductive hearing loss
occurs when sound waves are prevented from passing from the air to the fluid filled inner ear; earwax buildup, infection,
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sensorineural hearing loss
damage to hair cells within the ear. "nerve deafness"
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weber and rinne tests
use of a tuning fork to distinguish between conductive and sensorineural hearling losses
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fenestration
surgical procedure in which a new opening is created in the labyrinth to restore hearing loss
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