The nerve that gets pushed on with an orbital floor fracture.
Two structures the SPCA supply.
What are the posterior choroid and optic disc?
Type of collagen found in Descemet's membrane.
Bone the optic canal is located in.
What is the embryonic nucleus?
Nerves that start in the pons
What are 5, 6, 7, 8
Layer of the iris where neovascularization can happen.
What is the stroma?
The most psterior structure you can see in a grade 3 angle.
What is scleral spur?
Name the bones that make up the roof of the orbit.
What are the frontalis and lesser wing of sphenoid?
The index of refraction in the center of the lens.
What is 1.41?
Cranial nerve that that signals stem cells to become basal cells.
What is V1?
This is what all veins from the eye drain into.
What is the cavernous sinus?
Route of aqueous humor outflow that is pressure independent.
What is uveoscleral?
Another name for the ethmoid bone in the medial wall of the orbit
What is Lamina papyracea?
The layer that the iris dilator muscle is located in.
What is the anterior epithelium?
Cranial nerve the carries parasympathetic innervation to the lacrimal gland for lacrimation.
What is CN 7?
Name the four branches of the internal carotid artery.
What are the ophthalmic, posterior communicating, anterior cerebral, and middle cerebral (OPAM)?
Name the three drugs that increase outflow.
What are pilocarpine, prostaglandins, and alpha 2 agonists?
This is what the cavernous sinus starts behind.
What is the superior orbital fissure?
Gland that lubricates the eyelashes.
What are the glands of Zeiss?
Nerve that runs through the foramen ovale
V3
Branches of the ophthalmic artery
What is the central retinal artery, lacrimal, muscular, SPCA, LPCA, supraorbital artery, ethmoid artery
Receptor located in the dilator muscle of the iris.
What is alpha 1?
The sinus that surrounds the nasolacrimal duct.
What is the maxillary sinus?
Drusen accumulate in this layer of Bruch's membrane.
What is inner collagenous?