Essentials of Veterinary Ophthalmology. Kirk N. Gelatt
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Essentials of Veterinary Ophthalmology - Kirk N. Gelatt страница 61

Название: Essentials of Veterinary Ophthalmology

Автор: Kirk N. Gelatt

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Биология

Серия:

isbn: 9781119801351

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ (CN X) to the myocardium. Sensory stimulation of the eye and orbital areas results in stimulation of the vagal nucleus in the brain stem, thus causing a reflexive slowing of the heart. Conscious, healthy rabbits and dogs do not show clinically significant decreases in heart rate with globe compression of 1 min. Endotracheal intubation can cause vagal stimulation as well, resulting in similar reflexive cardiac alterations. In the dog, as the IOP increases, the heart rate may also increase, thus indicating the possibility of an intraocular‐sympathetic‐cardiac reflex as well as a trigeminovagal reflex.

      Introduction

      Physical Optics

      Light

      Light has alternately been described as a wave or as photon particles. However, these descriptions are not mutually exclusive. Both models also are applicable in the eye: the wave theory explains the physical changes light undergoes during its passage through the eye, and the particle theory explains the energy transformation that occurs when light strikes the outer segments of the photoreceptors. Hence, the first part of this chapter discusses light as a wave, while the second part discusses it as a particle.

Schematic illustration of light as a wave, which is characterized by two parameters.

      As light strikes the photoreceptor outer segments, it is absorbed by a visual photopigment. The function of this two‐part molecule reflects the principles of quantum physics, as it utilizes both the wave properties and the particle properties of light. The first part of the molecule, the opsin, determines the wavelength of the light that the photopigment will absorb, thus determining color vision. The second part of the molecule, the visual chromophore or retinal, uses the energy of the photon to undergo isomerization (from 11‐cis‐retinal into all‐trans retinal in the case of rhodopsin), thereby initiating conversion of a light stimulus into an electric signal. This process, the phototransduction process, which is discussed in detail later in this chapter, is the first step in the propagation of a visual signal.

      Photometry

Source Luminance (cd/m2)
Sun 109
Car light 107
Incandescent tungsten lamp 106–107
Fluorescent lamp 104–105
Clear sky at noon 104
Full moon 103
Street lamp 0.1–1.0
Moonless night sky 10−3 to 10−6

      a In general, only the photopic system is active at a luminance >3 cd/m2; at a luminance <0.03 cd/m2, the scotopic system functions alone. Both systems are active at intermediate luminance values, which are defined as mesopic vision.

      Luminance СКАЧАТЬ