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Choroid Information

The choroid, also known as the choroidea or choroid coat, is the vascular layer of the eye, containing connective tissue, and lying between the retina and the sclera. The human choroid is thickest at the far extreme rear of the eye (at 0.2 mm), while in the outlying areas it narrows to 0.1 mm.[1] The choroid provides oxygen and nourishment to the outer layers of the retina. Along with the ciliary body and iris, the choroid forms the uveal tract.

The structure of the choroid is generally divided into four layers:

Contents

Blood supply

There are two circulations of the eye: the retinal and uveal, supplied in humans by posterior ciliary arteries, originating from the ophthalmic artery. The arteries of the uveal circulation, supplying the uvea and outer and middle layers of the retina, are branches of the ophthalmic artery and enter the eyeball without passing with the optic nerve. The retinal circulation, on the other hand, derives its circulation from the central retinal artery, also a branch of the ophthalmic artery, but passing in conjunction with the optic nerve.[2] They are branching in a segmental distribution to the end arterioles and not anastomoses. This is clinically significant for diseases affecting choroidal blood supply. The macula responsible for central vision and the anterior part of the optic nerve are dependent on choroidal blood supply.[3]

In bony fish

Teleosts bear a body of capillary adjacent to the optic nerve called the choroidal gland. Though its function is not known, it is believed to be a supplemental oxygen carrier.[4]

Mechanism

Calf's eye dissected to expose the choroid: its tapetum lucidum is iridescent blue

Melanin, a darkly colored pigment, helps the choroid limit uncontrolled reflection within the eye that would potentially result in the perception of confusing images. In humans and most other primates, melanin occurs throughout the choroid. In albino humans, frequently melanin is absent and vision is low. In many animals, however, the partial absence of melanin contributes to superior night vision. In these animals, melanin is absent from a section of the choroid and within that section a layer of highly reflective tissue, the tapetum lucidum, helps to collect light by reflecting it in a controlled manner. The uncontrolled reflection of light from dark choroid produces the photographic red-eye effect on photos, whereas the controlled reflection of light from the tapetum lucidum produces eyeshine (see Tapetum lucidum).

See also

Additional images

References

  1. ^ a b c d e MRCOphth Sacs questions
  2. ^ "Sensory Reception: Human Vision: Structure and function of the Human Eye" vol. 27, p. 174 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1987
  3. ^ Hayreh SS. (Nov 1975). "Segmental nature of the choroidal vasculature". Br J Ophthalmol 59 (11): 631–48. doi:10.1136/bjo.59.11.631. PMC 1017426. PMID 812547. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1017426.
  4. ^ "Eye (Vertebrate)" McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, vol. 6, 2007.

External links

Sensory systemvisual systemglobe of eye (TA A15.2.1–6, TH 3.11.08.0-5, GA 10.1005)
Fibrous tunic (outer)
Sclera Episcleral layerSchlemm's canalTrabecular meshwork
Cornea Limbuslayers (Epithelium, Bowman's, Stroma, Descemet's, Endothelium)
1: posterior compartment 2: ora serrata 3: ciliary muscle 4: ciliary zonules 5: canal of Schlemm 6: pupil 7: anterior chamber 8: cornea 9: iris 10: lens cortex 11: lens nucleus 12: ciliary process 13: conjunctiva 14: inferior oblique muscule 15: inferior rectus muscule 16: medial rectus muscle 17: retinal arteries and veins 18: optic disc 19: dura mater 20: central retinal artery 21: central retinal vein 22: optical nerve 23: vorticose vein 24: bulbar sheath 25: macula 26: fovea 27: sclera 28: choroid 29: superior rectus muscle 30: retina
Uvea/vascular tunic (middle)
Choroid Capillary lamina of choroidBruch's membraneSattler's layer
Ciliary body Ciliary processesCiliary muscle
Iris StromaPupilIris dilator muscle • Iris sphincter muscle
Retina (inner)
Layers

Inner limiting membraneNerve fiber layerGanglion cell layerInner plexiform layerInner nuclear layer

Outer plexiform layerOuter nuclear layer

External limiting membraneLayer of rods and conesRetinal pigment epithelium
Cells Photoreceptor cells (Cone cell, Rod cell) → (Horizontal cell) → Bipolar cell → (Amacrine cell) → Retina ganglion cell (Midget cell, Parasol cell, Bistratified cell, Giant retina ganglion cells, Photosensitive ganglion cell) → Diencephalon: P cell, M cell, K cell Muller glia
Other Macula (Foveola, Fovea centralis) • Optic disc (Optic cup)
Anterior segment Anterior chamberAqueous humourPosterior chamberLens (Capsule of lens, Zonule of Zinn)
Posterior segment Vitreous humour
Other Ocular immune systemTapetum lucidumKeratocytes

: EYE

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Noun

choroid (plural choroids)
  1. (anatomy) The vascular layer of the eye lying between the retina and the sclera.
Related terms
  • chorioid
  • choroidea
  • choroid coat

from: Wiktionary: choroid,
Mon Oct 10 01:08:34 2011