Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology

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  1. Ciliary body (muscle) and suspensory ligaments—
    change shape of lens, which is made of a transpar-
    ent, elastic protein and which refracts light.

  2. Iris—two sets of smooth muscle fibers regulate
    diameter of pupil, that is, how much light strikes
    the retina.

  3. Retina—innermost layer of eyeball; contains rods
    and cones.

    • Rods—detect light; abundant toward periphery
      of retina.

    • Cones—detect color; abundant in center of
      retina.

    • Fovea—in the center of the macula lutea; con-
      tains only cones; area of best color vision.

    • Optic disc—no rods or cones; optic nerve
      passes through eyeball.



  4. Posterior cavity contains vitreous humor (semi-
    solid) that keeps the retina in place.

  5. Anterior cavity contains aqueous humor that
    nourishes the lens and cornea; made by capillaries
    of the ciliary body, flows through pupil, is reab-
    sorbed to blood at the canal of Schlemm.


Physiology of Vision



  1. Refraction (bending and focusing) pathway of
    light: cornea, aqueous humor, lens, vitreous
    humor.

  2. Lens is adjustable; ciliary muscle relaxes for distant
    vision, and lens is thin. Ciliary muscle contracts for
    near vision, and elastic lens thickens and has
    greater refractive power.

  3. Light strikes retina and stimulates chemical reac-
    tions in the rods and cones.

  4. In rods: rhodopsin breaks down to scotopsin and
    retinal (from vitamin A), and an electrical impulse
    is generated. In cones: specific wavelengths of light
    are absorbed (red, blue, green); chemical reactions
    generate nerve impulses.

  5. Ganglion neurons from the rods and cones form
    the optic nerve, which passes through the eyeball at
    the optic disc.

  6. Optic chiasma—site of the crossover of medial
    fibers of both optic nerves, permitting binocular
    vision.

  7. Visual areas in occipital lobes—each area receives
    impulses from both eyes; both areas create one
    image from the two slightly different images of
    each eye; both areas right the upside-down retinal
    image.


The Ear (see Figs. 9–7 through 9–10)


  1. Outer ear—auricle or pinna has no real function
    for people; ear canal curves forward and down into
    temporal bone.

  2. Middle ear—eardrum at end of ear canal vibrates
    when sound waves strike it. Auditory bones:
    malleus, incus, stapes; transmit vibrations to inner
    ear at oval window.



  • Eustachian tube—extends from middle ear to
    nasopharynx; allows air in and out of middle
    ear to permit eardrum to vibrate; air pressure
    in middle ear should equal atmospheric pres-
    sure.



  1. Inner ear—bony labyrinth in temporal bone, lined
    with membranous labyrinth. Perilymph is fluid
    between bone and membrane; endolymph is fluid
    within membrane. Membranous structures are the
    cochlea, utricle and saccule, and semicircular
    canals.

  2. Cochlea—snail-shell shaped; three internal canals;
    cochlear duct contains receptors for hearing: hair
    cells in the organ of Corti; these cells contain
    endings of the cochlear branch of the 8th cranial
    nerve.

  3. Physiology of hearing—sound waves stimulate
    vibration of eardrum, malleus, incus, stapes, oval
    window of inner ear, perilymph and endolymph of
    cochlea, and hair cells of organ of Corti. When hair
    cells bend, impulses are generated and carried by
    the 8th cranial nerve to the auditory areas in the
    temporal lobes. Round window prevents pressure
    damage to the hair cells.

  4. Utricle and saccule—membranous sacs in the
    vestibule; each contains hair cells that are affected
    by gravity. When position of the head changes,
    otoliths bend the hair cells, which generate
    impulses along the vestibular branch of the 8th cra-
    nial nerve to the cerebellum, midbrain, and cere-
    brum. Impulses are interpreted as position of the
    head at rest.

  5. Semicircular canals—three membranous ovals in
    three planes; enlarged base is the ampulla, which
    contains hair cells (crista) that are affected by
    movement. As body moves, hair cells bend in oppo-
    site direction, generate impulses along vestibular
    branch of 8th cranial nerve to cerebellum, mid-
    brain, and cerebrum. Impulses are interpreted as
    movement of the body, changing speed, stopping
    or starting.


218 The Senses

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