Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Visual Problems: Problems with
Structures of the Eye
Anmerkungen:
- Should talk about focusing light on the retina before mentioning the visual problems
- Refraction: necessary to focus light rays
- Cornea
- Astigmatism
- Define: A visual defect caused by the unequal
curving of the cornea (it is not spherical)
Anmerkungen:
- It can be one or more of the refractive surfaces of the eye
- But it's usually the cornea
- Test: Fan chart for astigmatism
- Some lines [horizontal or vertical] might appear
sharp, while others appear out of focus
- Solution: lenses that have different
amounts of focusing power (focal points) in the horizontal
and vertical planes
- Highly curved
- Powerful refractive
surface in the eye
Anmerkungen:
- Has a higher refractive index than air
- Aqueous Humor
- Glaucoma
- Lose your peripheral vision
- Caused by high pressure of the
watery fluid
- Help refract light
- Crystalline Lens
Anmerkungen:
- Create a table between myopia and hyperopia
- Emmetropia
- The condition of having
no refractive error
Anmerkungen:
- In other words, the refractive power of the eye is perfectly matched to the length of the eyeball
- Presbyopia
- A condition where you have a
decreased ability to focus on near
objects
- Aka. loss of near vision due to
insufficient accommodation
- Means "old sight"
- it's inevitable
Anmerkungen:
- Because lens become sclerotic (harder) & the capsule that encircles the lens (enabling it to change shape) loses its elasticity.
- Myopia
- Short-sighted or
nearsightedness
Anmerkungen:
- Remember the Imperssionist painter (Cezanne) - the image from far away looks blurry.
- When light entering the eye is focused in front
of the retina; and when the eyeball is too long
for the optics
- Therefore distant objects cannot be seen sharply
- Solution: Negative (minus) lenses
Anmerkungen:
- They diverse the light rays before they enter the eye
- Hyperopia
Anmerkungen:
- Where accommodation is needed to see near objects clearly,
- Long-sighted or farsightedness
- When light entering the eye is focused BEHIND the retina; and
the eyeball is too short for the optics
- Solution: Positive (plus) lenses
Anmerkungen:
- They converge the light rays before they enter the eye
- Cataracts
- An opacity (loss of transparency) of the
crystalline lens.
- Caused by the irregularity
(unevenness) of the crystallins
Anmerkungen:
- Crystallins: are a class of proteins that make up the lens
- Consequence:
interferes with vision
Anmerkungen:
- by absorbing and scattering more light than the normal lens does
- Forms of cataracts
- Congenital cataracts
Anmerkungen:
- cataracts present at birth
- Through old age
Anmerkungen:
- Most are discovered after the age of 50.
- The prevalence of cataracts
increases with age
Anmerkungen:
- By age 70 almost everyone has some loss of transparency
- Alter the refractive
power by changing its
shape
- Accommodation
- The process by
which the eye
changes its focus
Anmerkungen:
- Therefore altering its refractive power
- The fatter the lens is, the more power it has.
- Because the lens changes shape
Anmerkungen:
- [There's a table on pg 3 of my notes]
When the lens becomes fatter -> focus on near objects
- Accomplished through
contraction of the cilliary msucle
Anmerkungen:
- Lens are attached to the ciliary muscle through tiny fibres (“zonules of Zinn”)
- Goal: to bring objects into focus
- Retina
- Age-Related Macular
Degeneration
- There are two forms of it
- Wet Form
Anmerkungen:
- Dry form
Anmerkungen:
- One that involves rods and cones; not blood vessels
- A disease associated with aging that affects the macula
- "age-related"
- usually occurs in older adults,
starting at the age of 50
- Macula
- is the central part of the retina;
- That includes the fovea
- Fovea
- Contains the highest concentration of cones
- Has no rods
- Is the portion of the retina that
- Produces the highest visual acuity; and
- Therefore "sees" the world most clearly
- E.g. Able to identify objects, read and to inspect fine detail
- Serves as the point of fixation
- A dented region in the retina;
behind the pupil
- a small pit near the centre of
the macula
- That has a high concentration of CONES
- Consequence: A blind spot in the
visual field (due to a loss of cones in
the macula
Anmerkungen:
- Therefore, AMD destroys
sharp central vision
Anmerkungen:
- Thus, making it difficult to read, drive and recognise faces.
- Retinitis pigmentosa
- A hereditary disease
Anmerkungen:
- Commonly runs in families
- can be caused by defects in a
number of different genes
- A progressive degeneration of the retina
Anmerkungen:
- Specifically the photoreceptors and the pigment epithelium
- Consequence: on night and peripheral vision
- Common form: Rods get affected before cones
- Affecting peripheral: shrinks the visual field
- Therefore, many people may not notice
the onset of RP at first