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Learning Objectives. Describe the function of major structures of the visual systemDescribe major milestones in development of the visual systemDescribe normal age related changes in vision and their impact on occupational performanceDescribe changes in visual function associated with pathology.
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1. Anatomy/Neuro-Anatomy of the Visual System
2. Learning Objectives Describe the function of major structures of the visual system
Describe major milestones in development of the visual system
Describe normal age related changes in vision and their impact on occupational performance
Describe changes in visual function associated with pathology
3. Eye as a camera
4. Structures of the Eye and Orbit The anterior visual system
6. Orbit Eyeball
Optic nerve
Extraocular
muscles
Other nerves
Blood vessels
Lacrimal gland
Fat
Connective tissue
7. Eyelids and Eyelashes Protect eye from foreign bodies
Help limit light into the eye
Functions as part of the lacrimal system
Blinking squeezes tears from lacrimal gland
Tears fill in uneven surfaces of cornea
Nourishes and protects cornea
8. Eyeball has three layers Outer protective layer
Sclera and cornea
Middle vascular layer
Uveal tract
Consists of iris, ciliary
body and choroid
Inner sensory layer
Retina
9. Sclera Encloses eyeball except for cornea
Extension of the dura mater of CNS
Protects inner contents of eye and
Helps maintain shape of the eye
Extraocular muscles attach to its surface
10. Cornea Avascular
Transparent
5 layers
Protects inner contents of eye
Refracts light
11. Aqueous Continuously produced & drained away
trabecular meshwork
canal of Schlemm
Maintains health of lens and cornea
Maintains shape & pressure within eye
12. Iris Pigmentation protects retina
Controls pupil aperture
Dilator muscle
sympathetic control
• Spincter muscle
Check this part of outline-incompleteCheck this part of outline-incomplete
13. Lens 65% water 35% protein
Avascular
Refracts light to focus image onto retina
Fibers form throughout life
14. Ciliary Body Ciliary muscle
Shapes lens
Controlled by CN III
Ciliary process
Secretes aqueous
15. Vitreous Maintains transparency and form of eye
Holds retina in place
16. Conjunctiva Thin transparent membrane covering sclera and inner eyelid
Provides protection and moisture
Many blood vessels, few pain fibers
Conjunctivitis common condition
17. Choroid Vascular supply for eye
Capillaries and veins
18. Retina Lines posterior 2/3rd of eye
Distant receptor organ
5 layers
Inside out arrangement
19. Rod Receptor Cells Concentrated in periphery
Activate in low illumination
Detect general form, not details
Provide background information
20. Cone Receptor Cells Capture detail and color
Require direct stimulation
Bright light’
Concentrated in fovea
21. Retinal Pigment Epithelium (RPE) Works with Bruchs membrane and choroid layer
Maintains health of receptor cells
Breakdown causes build up of cellular debris
22. Retinal Processing Pathway Impulses converge onto bipolar cells
Converge again onto ganglion cells
Axons of ganglion cells merge and exit at optic disc
23. Optic nerve CN II
Each nerve contains 1 million plus heavily myelinated ganglion axons
Macular fibers inside peripheral fibers outside
24. Visual Field Visual field
160-180 degrees horizontally
120 degrees vertically
Practical field of vision
Head and eye movement
270 degrees
25. Hill of Vision Concept
27. Extraocular Muscles (EOM) Medial rectus
Lateral rectus
Superior rectus
Inferior rectus
Superior oblique
Inferior oblique
28. Cranial Nerves Controlling Extraocular Eye Muscles CN III Oculomotor
CN IV Trochlear
CN VI Abducens
29. Oculomotor Nerve (3) Innervates 5 muscles
Medial, superior,and inferior rectus muscles, inferior oblique
Levator palpebrae superioris
Internal musculature of the eye
Ciliary muscle (lens)
Spincter muscle (pupil)
30. Trochlear Nerve (4) Innervates superior oblique
Down and out muscle of eye
31. Abducens Nerve (6) Innervates lateral rectus
Abducts eye
36. Development of the Visual System
37. Visual system develops from three types of tissue Neuroectodermal from brain
Becomes retina, iris and optic nerve
Surface ectoderm of head
Forms lens
Mesoderm
Forms vascular supply and sclera
44. Rim of optic cup eventually becomes the ciliary body and muscle, iris, dilator and sphincter muscles
Mesenchyme cells develop into the choroid and sclera-both are extensions of vascular and fibrous structures within brain
Sclera-continuation of dura mater
Choroid-continuation of pia arachnoid
Form a sheath around the optic n.
45. The relationship between these structures explains why an increase in cerebral spinal fluid after brain injury can be diagnosed by observing the optic disc for papilledema
46. Maturation of Face and Eyes As the embryo develops, the eyes migrate from the sides to the front as the face matures
Face is formed by 14 weeks
During development, structures may fail to fully form or to close completely
Creates many of the congenital eye conditions observed in children
48. Maturation of Visual System Pre-natal Post-natal Rods and Cones
25 wks-both begin to develop
Optic Tract
28-38 wks-begins to myelinate
Superior Colliculus
Basic structure develops 16-28 wks Rods and Cones
4 mos-complete with rods finishing first
Optic Tract
Rapid myelination first 2 mos continued for 2 years
Superior Colliculus
Myelination completed at 3 mos
49. Maturation of Visual System Pre-natal Post-natal LGN
Matures after birth
GC Tracts
Myelination begins at birth LGN
Process takes 9 mos
Stereoscopic vision at 3-4 mos
GC Tracts
Completed in 4-5 mos
50. Maturation of Visual SystemPre-natal Post-natal Visual cortex
25-28 wks-starts dendritic growth, increasing synaptic density, cortical layers develop Visual cortex
Doubles in density first 2 years, adult synaptic density and functional maturity by age 11
51. Eye Movement Able to fixate and make basic eye movements by 2-3 months
2 years to obtain good control
Up to 9 years to obtain complex control
52. Visual Acuity Newborn
20/200, sees best in 2-75 cm range
3 months
20/60
6 months
20/20
2 years
Acute near vision-fine motor skills develop
53. Normal Age Related Changes in Vision
54. Reduced Visual Acuity Static acuity
Decreases to 20/30-20/40
Prevalence 40% by age 70
Dynamic acuity
Decrease may be due to reduced OM control
55. Loss of Accommodation A.k.a. presbyopia
Result of compacting of protein fibers in center of lens
Lens thickens and loses flexibility
Occurs gradually beginning in 40s
Creates need for bifocal
56. Floaters Strands of protein which float in vitreous
Float more easily in old eye because vitreous is more fluid
More noticeable in bright light
Generally benign unless accompanied by bright flashes of light or significant increase in number
57. Dry Eyes Lacrimal glands do not make enough or make poor quality tears
More prevalent in women
Can be exacerbated by medication
Causes itchiness, burning, decreased acuity
Treated with artificial tears or surgery
58. Increased Need for Light Pupil diameter decreases
A.k.a. senile miosis
Lens thickens becoming more yellow
Combined-these two conditions reduce the amount of light coming into eye
80 yr old person needs 10x as much light as an average 23 year old
59. Susceptibility to Glare Lens and cornea become less smooth
Lens & vitreous develop protein strands
Combine to cause light scatter
Increased discomfort and disability
Lose acuity under glare condition
Also takes longer to recover from glare
60. Reduced Dark/Light Adaptation Takes longer to reform and store pigments
Never reach same level of dark adaptation as younger person
More difficult to go from bright to dark than dark to bright
61. Reduced Contrast Sensitivity Caused by changes in color and density of lens and decreased pupil aperture
75 year old needs 2x as much contrast as younger person
90 year old needs 10x as much contrast
62. Reduced Color Perception Caused by yellowing of lens
Decrease in sensitivity at violet end of spectrum
White objects may appear yellow
63. Reduced Visual Field Changes in facial structure
Nose grows??
Orbit loses fat and eye sinks in
64. Reduced Visual Attention Decline in ability to
Attend to objects in complex, dynamic arrays
Simultaneously monitor central and peripheral visual fields
Diameter of visual field decreases
90 yr olds-40% have an attentional field of less than 20 degrees
65. Pathology of the Visual System
66. Anterior visual system has three jobs to do Focus the image on the retina
Capture the image (encode it)
Transmit the image to the CNS
67. Sharp focusing of image on retina depends on: Sufficient refraction of light rays entering the eye
Focal point established on the fovea
Transparency of all intervening structures between outside of eye and retina
Adequate illumination
68. Sufficient Refraction of Light Rays entering the Eye
70. Hyperopia
71. Myopia
72. Smoothness of Refracting Surfaces Astigmatism
Cornea is spoon shaped or dimpled
Light rays are unevenly refracted
Can develop with trauma and age
Corrected for optically with cylinder
Cataract
Dead cells deposited in lens, calcify
Begins in periphery, progressing to center
Surface becomes pitted
Causes light scatter and veiling glare
Eventually complete opacity
73. Closeness of Object As object comes closer, focal point on retina is pushed back
74. Closeness of Object As object comes closer, focal point on retina is pushed back
75. Accommodation 3 step process
Convergence
Lens thickens
Pupil constricts to reduce light scatter
Controlled by CN III
Affected by lens
Presbyopia
Aphakia
76. Control of Light Scatter Light rays are refracted more strongly in periphery than center of lens
Causes wild and scattered light rays
Reduced by blocking peripheral rays with pupillary constriction
Increases acuity
Pinpoint vision
77. Transparency of Intervening Structures Any opacity in cornea, aqueous, lens, vitreous will prevent image from reaching retina
Common conditions
Corneal scarring
Cataract
Trauma-vitreous hemorrhage
Also causes veiling glare
78. Adequate Illumination Retina must be adequately diffused with light to capture an image
Amount of light is controlled by pupil
Any condition affecting responsiveness of pupil will affect
Tolerance of light
Ability to rapidly adjust to changes in light
Opacity in intervening structures also affects amount of light entering eye
79. Ability of retina to capture image Retinal function can be affected by disease, injury or congenital conditions
Macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, retinitis pigmentosa, retinal detachment
Damaged retina creates blind spot in vision
Known as a scotoma
Performance limitations depend on area of retina damaged
Peripheral vs. central
80. Macular Scotoma Area of reduced light sensitivity within central 20 degrees of the visual field
81. Macular Scotoma Occurs with retinal diseases
Affects ability to
See small details
Discriminate contrast
Discriminate color
Primary pathology dealt with in patients with low vision
83% of patients referred for low vision services found to have dense macular scotomas regardless of disease
82. Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope
83. Central Scotoma Scotoma impinges on and involves the fovea
84. Para-central Scotoma Within the central 20 degrees of the field but not involving the fovea
85. Ring Scotoma Surrounds the fovea on 4 sides
86. Scotomas may vary in density Dense
No response to light
Relative/Threshold
Responds to light if bright enough
87. Adaptation to Scotoma Scotoma creates a hole in visual field
Deprives CNS of vision needed to identify objects
CNS adapts using various mechanisms
Perceptual completion
Metamorphopsia
Development of PRL
88. Perceptual Completion Perception in which objects or a visual scene appears complete despite missing visual input
Example of top down “cognitive processing” where we see something because we expect to see it
91. Scotomas less than 5 degrees
CNS can perceptually complete
Example: own blind spot
Person unaware of presence of scotoma
Scotomas greater than 5 degrees
CNS will attempt to perceptually complete but may not be successful
Person does not perceive black hole but instead a blurriness or inability to bring object into focus
92. Metamorphopsia Scotoma is too big to complete perceptually
Objects appear warped or misaligned
93. Preferred Retinal Locus (PRL) If scotoma covers fovea, CNS adopts an eccentric retinal area to act as a pseudo-fovea for visual tasks previously completed by the fovea
Develops within 24 hours of loss of fovea
96. 40% place PRL above the scotoma on the retina(leaves lower portion of field clear)
97. 35% place PRL to the right (leaves left side of page clear)
98. 20% place PRL to left
99. 7% place PRL below
100. Person may develop more than one PRL and use a different one depending on task and lighting conditions
Ability to use PRL to direct eye movements is more highly correlated to reading ability than other visual function
Although person develops PRL, he/she may not be aware of it
Important to assess ability to use PRL
101. Peripheral Visual Field Deficit Person also exercises perceptual completion
May be completely unaware of deficit
Will not interfere with perception of visual details (acuity)
But will affect mobility
Reduces detection of motion and form
102. Ability of optic nerve to transmit visual input Can be damaged by disease, trauma and congenital conditions
Glaucoma
Optic neuritis
Head injury
Can lose all or part of field
Depending on location, extent of damage
104. Deficits in Posterior Visual System
105. Visual Field Deficits Lesions along geniculocalcarine tracts or in occipital lobe
Most common cause in adult is stroke
Posterior cerebral artery (PCA)
Pure visual stroke (sometimes affects language)
Middle cerebral artery (MCA)
Mix of motor, sensory, visual, cognitive
Lesion behind LGN will always cause homonymous loss
108. Homonymous Hemianopsia
109. Hemianopsia with Macular Sparring
110. Cortical Blindness Also called cortical visual impairment
CVI
Damage is so significant in occipital lobe, CNS is not able to complete any cortical processing of vision
111. Person loses:
112. Person loses: Object identification through visual system
Visual orientation to space
Cognitive application of vision
113. Person retains
114. Person retains Subcortical processing of vision
Navigational vision
Vision for safety
Other sensory processing
Haptic discrimination
Auditory discrimination
115. Alteration of Visual Attention Difficulty arousing attention
Difficulty attending globally
Difficulty attending to details
Difficulty sustaining attention
Difficulty dividing/shifting attention
Asymmetrical attention
Unilateral spatial neglect
116. Diminishment of Attention Has pervasive effect on cognition
Person takes in information in incomplete disorganized fashion
CNS cannot properly analyze incoming information
Decision making is based in incomplete and/or incorrect information
Garbage in - garbage out