Chapter 50 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the layers of the retina? (remember your pneumonic)

A
  • Inner limiting membrane
  • Layer of optic nerve fibers
  • Ganglion
  • Inner plexiform
  • Inner nuclear
  • Outer Plixiform
  • outer nucear
  • Rods and cones
  • Pigmented epithelium
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2
Q

What are the four functional segments of the rods and cones?

A
  • Outer segment
  • Innter segment
  • Nucleus
  • Synaptic body
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3
Q

What is contained in the outer segment?

A
  • Light sensitive photochemical (rhodopsin in rods)
  • layered discs
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4
Q

What is contained within the inner segment?

A

Cytoplasmic organelles:

-mainly mitochondria

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5
Q

What is the major purpose of the pigmented layer of the retinal epithelium?

A

-prevents light reflection which increases visual acuity

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6
Q

What two compounds together make rhodopsin?

A

Scotopsin and retinal

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7
Q

What is the affect of light exposure to rhodopsin?

A

-The cis-retinal is converted to all trans-retinal and then separates from scotopsin

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8
Q

What causes night blindness?

A

-Vitamin A defficiency

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9
Q

How does a lack of Vitamin A cause night blindness?

A

-Limits the amount of retinal and therefore rhodopsin that can be synthesized and then decreases low light (purple) vision.

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10
Q

Where is vitamin A stored and how can a deficiency be restored?

A
  • the liver
  • IV vitamin A
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11
Q

What is the membrane polarization of Rods in the light? How about when it is dark?

A
  • Light: hyperpolarized
  • Dark: Depolarized
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12
Q

What is the flow of effects when light striked a rhodopsin molecule?

A

Rhodopsin exposed to light–> Activated rhodopsin (all trans-retinal)–> activates transducin–> activates cGMP phosphodiesterase–> decreases cGMP–> closure of cGMP gated Na channels–> Decreases Na influx–> hyperpolarization

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13
Q

Is the polariazation state of the rod dependant on the amount of light striking it?

A
  • Yes
  • The more light, the more hyperpolarized.
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14
Q

What enzyme converts activated rhodopsin back to rhodopsin and reverses the whole excitatory process?

A

-Rhodopsin kinase

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15
Q

Are rods or cones more sensitive?

A

Rods (30-300 times)

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16
Q

What is the light adaptation?

A
  • When moving from dark to light:
  • the rods will be exposed to light and rapidly convert their retinal to vitamin A ehich reduces the concentration of photosensitive pigments
17
Q

What is the dark adaptation?

A

When moving from light to dark:

-retinal and opsins are coverted back to light sensitive pigments (rhodopsin) and Vitamin A is converted back into retinal (to form rhodopsin)

18
Q

Which adapts more quickly to light and dark? Which achieves the greatest sensitivity to light?

A
  • The cones adapt quickly but briefly
  • The rods achieve a greater sensitivity (the tortise wins the race)
19
Q

What cones are stimulated by what color?

A
  • blue pigment cones= blue light
  • Red pigment cones= red light
  • Green pigment cones= green light

White light= all 3 equally

20
Q

What does the overlap in cone sensitivity allow?

A

-allows for the detection of mixed color

21
Q

What is protonope?

A
  • lack of or loss of RED cones
  • shortened visual spectrum at the long wavelengths
22
Q

What is the name for green color blindness?

A
  • Deuteranope
  • normal visual spectral length, missing green component
23
Q

What is the inheritance pattern of color blindness?

A
  • X linked recessive
  • so mostly in males
24
Q

Which are the only retinal neurons that transmit visual signals via action potentials?

A

Ganlgion cells through the optic nerve.

25
Q

What are the 5 main type of neural cells located within the retina?

A
  • Photoreceptive cells (rods and cones)
  • Horizontal cells
  • Bipolar cells
  • Amacrine cells
  • Ganglion cells
26
Q

Where are horzontal cells and where do they transmit?

A
  • outer plexiform layer
  • transmit signals from the rods and cones to the bipolar cells
27
Q

What is the location and function of bipolar cells?

A
  • Transmit signals from the rods and cones to the ganglion cells and the amicrine cells
  • between the outer and inner plexiform layer
28
Q

What is the major function of the amicrine cells?

A

-lateral inhibition

29
Q

What do ganglion cells do?

A

-transmit signals from the retina to the brain

30
Q

What is the output of horzontal cells?

A
  • always inhibtory
  • provide lateral inhibition
31
Q

How are amicrine cells directionally senstive?

A

-They respond to a spot of movement in a specific direction across the retina

32
Q

What are some characteristics of X ganglion cells?

A
  • most numerous
  • small fields so fine detail
  • resposnible for color vision
33
Q

What are some characteristics of Y ganglion cells?

A
  • largest and highest velocity
  • wide spread retinal areas
34
Q

What is the main purpose of the Y ganglion cells?

A

-to alert the brain to a new visual stimulus and gives clues as to where to move the eyes

35
Q

Why are ganglion cells located laterally to the sopt of light inhibited? (off)

A

-the “on” ganglion cell laterally inhibits those around it, increasing contrast

36
Q

What type of bipolar cells transmit a direct, excitatory signal?

A

-depolarizing bipolar cells

37
Q

Why type of bipolar cells transmit a lateral inhibitory signal?

A

-hyperpolarizing bipolar cells

38
Q

How do the ganglion cells start to distinguish color?

A

-some cone colors excite the depolarizing ganglion cells while other inhibit it (hyperpolarizing ganglion cells). (comon with red and green)