Eye Diseases/Conditions, Senses, Neuron Anatomy, Nervous System Pathways, Neuron Communication

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42 Terms

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Astigmatism

  • Definition: A common vision condition that causes blurred or distorted vision.

  • Causes: Irregular shape of the cornea or lens, or an uneven curvature of the eye.

  • Symptoms: Blurred vision, eyestrain, headaches, difficulty seeing at night.

  • Treatment: Eyeglasses, contact lenses, or refractive surgery.

  • Complications: Eye strain, headaches, reduced visual acuity and lazy eye

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Retinablastoma

  • Definition: Retinoblastoma is a rare form of eye cancer that primarily affects young children.

  • Symptoms: White pupil (leukocoria), crossed or misaligned eyes (strabismus), poor vision, eye redness or swelling.

  • Causes: Genetic mutation in the RB1 gene, inherited or sporadic.

  • Treatment: Enucleation (removal of the affected eye), chemotherapy, radiation therapy, laser therapy.

  • Complications: Risk of secondary cancers, vision loss, cosmetic concernss

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Amplyopia (lazy eye)

  • Definition: A condition where one eye has reduced vision due to abnormal visual development during childhood.

  • Causes: Strabismus (misalignment of the eyes/muscle imbalance), refractive errors, cataracts, or eye injuries.

    • One eye has a weak signal to the brain

  • Symptoms: Blurred vision, poor depth perception, squinting, or tilting the head.

  • Treatment: Patching the stronger eye to force the weaker eye to work, eyeglasses, eye drops, or surgery.

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Color blindness

  • Color blindness is caused by a deficiency or absence of certain color-sensitive cells in the eyes.

    • cones in retina not developing properly or not developing at all

  • Symptoms include difficulty distinguishing between certain colors, especially red and green.

  • can cause light sensitivity

  • color blind glasses

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Cataracts

  • Definition: Cataracts are a clouding of the lens in the eye.

    • small bits of protein in lower lens

  • causes double vision

  • Causes: Aging, injury, certain medications, and medical conditions.

  • Symptoms: Blurred vision, sensitivity to light, difficulty seeing at night.

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Glaucoma

  • Definition: A group of eye conditions that damage the optic nerve, leading to vision loss.

  • Symptoms: Gradual loss of peripheral vision, tunnel vision, blurred vision, eye pain or redness.

  • more blind spots, loses communication w/brain

  • eye pain/blindness

  • Complications: Vision loss, blindness, decreased quality of life.

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conjunctivitus/ pink eye

  • Causes: Viral, bacterial, or allergic reactions

  • membrane under the eyelids has blood vessels inflamation

  • blurred vision and sensitivity to light

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receptive field

Receptive Field:

  • Definition: The area of the input space that a neuron is sensitive to.

    • larger field = poorer ability to pinpoint

    • smaller = greater ability to pinpoint sensatoin

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nucleus

houses dna and controls cell

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dendrites

signals received

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mitochondria

power house of the cell

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nissl body

makes proteins/ macromolecules

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collateral

where axons can branch off

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axon

long section of neuron where signal carries

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axon hillock

start of impulse propagation

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synaptic terminal

signal sent to next cell

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synapse

space where a neuron can communicate with another cell

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General senses

temperature, pain, touch, pressure, vibration, proprioception (body position relativity)

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Special Senses

Smell, taste, vision, hearing, balance

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Temperature

recptor - thermoreceptors

  • Notice changes fast and adapt quickly

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pain

receptor: nociceptors

  • common on surface of skin, joints

  • receptive field typically large

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Touch, pressure, vibration, position (overall)

overall sensory receptor : mechanoreceptors

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Touch/pressure/vibration (all)

Tactile receptors

  • Often difficult to differentiate between touch, pressure, and vibration

  • fine touch vs. crude touch

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Pressure (only)

Receptor: Baroreceptors

  • typically for autonomic activities, between tissues of the wall of organ & blood vessels

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Position (only)

receptor: proprioceptors

  • monitors position of joints, tension in tendons and ligaments, and state of muscle contraction

  • constant stream of information to your conscious/subconscious

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Equlibrium

receptor: hair cells inside inner ear

  • on top of hair cells is a gelatinous mask and CaCO3 (otolith) crystals, which push down on hair cells

  • when the head tilts, otolith crystals move with gravity and “frees” the hair cells, which upsets one’s equilibrium

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hearing

receptor : hair cells

  • uses pressure in the form of sound waves and vibrations between hair cells to formulate a sensation

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smell

receptor: olfactory'

  • receptors can bind to many different odorant molecules

  • 800+ receptors in humans

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taste

receptor: taste receptors ( sweet, bitter)

  • primarily identifies toxins and nutrients

  • sweet, bitter, salty, sour, savory (umami)

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central nervous system

analyszes sensory information and coordinates output

consists of brain & spinal cord

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afferent division —> somatic sensory receptor OR visceral sensory receptor

afferent : sends sensory info to CNS

sometic sensory receptor : from outside envirement

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efferent division → somatic OR autonomic

efferent: motor commands

somatic : voluntary actions

autonomic: involuntary actions / naturally occuring

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somatic → skeletal muscle

voluntary actions

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autonomic →parasympathetic OR sympathetic → smootj/cardiac muscle, glands, adipose tissue

parasympathetic: rest and digest , opposite of sympathetic

Sympathetic: fight or flight

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receptors

recieves input

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effectors

motor commands through…

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action potential

travels through synaptic terminal and depolarizes membrane

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calcium channels

open and calcium ions enter

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Neurotransmitter vesicles

move to fuse with the ST membrane

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Vesicles

release neurotransmitters(NT) through exocytosis to synapse (aka synaptic cleft)

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Neurotransmitter →

binds with NT receptor, triggering AP in next cell

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Neurotransmitter →

degraded our reabsorbed by NT transporter