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Anatomy and Physiology of the Eye Medical Terminology 120 Latoyska Howard

Anatomy and physiology of the eye

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Page 1: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Anatomy and Physiology of the Eye

Medical Terminology 120Latoyska Howard

Page 2: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Emmetropia (EM)

State of normal vision No need for contact lenses

or glasses Occurs when cornea

curvature, shape of the lens and their distance from each other and retina are working together perfectly

Cornea and lens focus the rays of light from the object evenly on the retina, creating a sharp image

Page 3: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Ophthalmology (Ophth)

Branch of medicine specializing in the anatomy, function and diseases of the eye.

Ophthalmologist – Specialize in eye and vision care – Prescribe glasses and contact lenses and eye surgery

Specialties – Glaucoma – Neuro – Ophthalmology – Pediatric – Ophthalmic – And many more…

Page 4: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Astigmatism (Astigm)

A condition where light rays are not focused evenly on the retina. This causes a person to have distorted image– In other words a person doesn’t see as

clearly as they should

Page 5: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Esotropia (ST)

Condition where an eye is turned inward– Known as cross eyed– Example, of strabismus

Muscle weakness of the eye Conditions begins in early child hood Adults can form this condition

– loss of vision– Grave’s disease – Brain or head tumor or trauma

Can run in the family

Page 6: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Visual Acuity (VA)

Measures the sharpness of a patients vision

A chart is used called a Snellen Chart – Patient identifies

letters from a distance of 20 feet

Page 7: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Laser –Assisted in – situ Keratomileusis (LASIK)

Page 8: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Laser –Assisted in – situ Keratomileusis (LASIK)

Common surgery correcting nearsightedness– Astigmatism– Myopia

Removes tissue from the cornea w/o damaging any tissue surrounding it

It’s a cosmetic surgery and may or may not be covered by insurance

Page 9: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Exotropia (XT)

Outward turning of the eye – Example of strabismus – Called wall-eyed

Page 10: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Each Eye/ Both Eye (OU)

OU – Means dealing with both eyes – Usually seen for prescriptions for glasses

or contact lenses

Page 11: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Rapid Eye Movement (REM)

Occurs when enters the sleep stage REM

– 90 minutes after the body has entered the sleep stage

– Intense dreams may occur

Page 12: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Eye, Ears, Nose, and Throat (EENT)

A brunch of medicine specializing in the, eye, ears, nose and throat

Page 13: Anatomy and physiology of the eye

Bone Conduction (BC)

Conduction of sound through the bones of the skull

High pitched sounds– Causes vibrations – Compresses the bony case of the inner ear– Stimulates the sensory cells

Perceives sound waves in the air Low pitched sounds (inertial bone)

– Vibrate the entire skull