The Iris and Pupil




(1)
University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

 




The Iris



Overview




1.

The iris is the most anterior portion of the uveal tract [1].

 

2.

The iris has a central aperture, the pupil, which determines the amount of light entering the eye.

 

3.

The iris contains two muscles: the sphincter and dilator pupillae.



  • These control the pupillary aperture, allowing the pupil size to vary from 1 to 9 mm.

 

4.

The iris consists of an anterior stromal layer and a posterior double-layered epithelium.



  • The sphincter and dilator muscles are located within the stroma.

 


Development




1.

The double iris pigment epithelium is derived from the optic cup [2].



  • The posterior epithelial layer is derived from the internal layer of the cup.


  • The anterior epithelial layer is derived from the external layer of the cup.


  • Both the dilator and sphincter pupillae muscles are derived from the anterior epithelial layer [3].

 

2.

The iris stroma is derived from migrating neural crest cells [4].

 


Structure (Fig. 6.1) [1, 5]




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Fig. 6.1
Structure of the iris



1.

Iris stroma



  • The iris stroma consists of fibroblasts, melanocytes, blood vessels, and nerves in a collagen-rich extracellular matrix.


  • The anterior surface is velvety and lacks epithelium. It is not a barrier for solutes or fluid.


  • Stromal vessels have non-fenestrated endothelium that maintains the blood-aqueous barrier [6].


  • Stromal melanocyte pigment concentration determines iris color [7].


  • A lightly pigmented iris is blue/green as longer wavelengths are absorbed and shorter reflected.

 

2.

Sphincter pupillae



  • The sphincter is a 1-mm-wide ring of smooth muscle within the pupillary border.


  • Smooth muscle cells are connected by gap junctions and innervated by parasympathetic nerves.


  • Uniform pupillary constriction is achieved through simultaneous stimulation of each muscle segment and spread of current through gap junctions [8].

 

3.

Dilator pupillae



  • The dilator is a thin peripheral layer of myoepithelium extending from the iris root.


  • The muscle fibers are long basal processes extending from cells in the anterior iris epithelial layer.


  • These are interconnected by gap junctions and innervated by sympathetic nerves.


  • Like pupillary constriction, uniform pupillary dilation is achieved through simultaneous stimulation of each muscle segment and spread of current through gap junctions [8].

 

4.

Iris epithelium [9]



  • There are 2 iris-pigmented epithelial layers, anterior and posterior, aligned apex to apex.


  • The anterior is continuous with the outer pigmented ciliary body epithelial layer.


  • The posterior is continuous with the inner non-pigmented ciliary body epithelial layer.

 


The Pupil



Overview: Functions of the Pupil




1.

Broadening the luminance range for vision



  • The pupil constricts in light and dilates in the dark to help our eye function optimally at different background luminance levels (see Chap. 21) [10].

 

2.

Control of optical aberrations



  • The pupil’s aperture restricts light rays to the central cornea and lens [11].


  • This reduces optical blur from refractive error, spherical aberration, and chromatic aberration [11, 12].


  • The aperture is not too small to cause image degradation from diffraction and reduced illumination [13].

 

3.

Depth of focus



  • Pupil constriction accompanies accommodation to increase depth of focus [14].


  • Approaching objects remain relatively well focused as only radially oriented light enters the eye.

 

4.

Aqueous conduct channel



  • The pupil acts as a aqueous conduct channel between the posterior and anterior chambers [15].


  • This prevents a dangerous buildup of pressure in the posterior chamber.

 


Control of Pupillary Aperture






  • The size of the pupil aperture is influenced by the following factors:

    (a)

    The light reflex

     

    (b)

    The near reflex

     

    (c)

    Reflexive dilation

     

    (d)

    Other factors

     


The Light Reflex (Fig. 6.2)




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Fig. 6.2
The light reflex





  • The light reflex is a parasympathetic-mediated pupillary constriction to light [16].


  • The neural pathway consists of afferent, interneuron, and efferent divisions.


1.

Afferent division: photoreceptor cells



  • The light reflex involves photoreceptor cells used in visual perception [17].


  • Rods provide input for pupillary contractions in scotopic conditions [5].


  • Cones provide input for large pupillary constrictions in photopic conditions [17, 18].

 

2.

Afferent division: intrinsically photosensitive ganglion cells



  • A specific ganglion cell type (the γ-cell) mediates the light reflex to midbrain pretectal nuclei [19].


  • As well as receiving rod- and cone-cell input, these ganglion cells contain the photopigment melanopsin and have intrinsic photosensitivity used for nonimage-projecting visual functions (see Chap. 8, The Retina) [20].

 

3.

Afferent division: pretectal input



  • Each pretectal nucleus receives:

    (a)

    Uncrossed ipsilateral temporal RGC axons

     

    (b)

    Crossed contralateral nasal axons

     


  • These travel via the optic nerve, chiasm, and then tract.

 

4.

Interneuron division



  • Pretectal nuclei neurons send equal bilateral projections to the Edinger-Westphal (E-W) nuclei.


  • The E-W nuclei are located in the midbrain on either side of the periaqueductal gray matter [21].

 

5.

Efferent division



  • The E-W nucleus sends preganglionic parasympathetic fibers in the oculomotor nerve to the ciliary ganglion where they synapse with postganglionic parasympathetic neurons [1, 22].


  • These travel to the eye via the short ciliary nerves to innervate the sphincter pupillae.


  • Factors affecting the light reflex


  • Stimulus factors (e.g., retinal adaptation, stimulus duration, light intensity, retinal location) that influence visual perception produce a comparable change in pupil responsiveness [16, 23].


  • With greater intensity stimuli, the amplitude of constriction increases and latency decreases [5].


  • With long duration stimuli, the pupil may undergo oscillations (hippus) or slow dilation (pupil escape) after initial contraction due to light adaptation [24].

 


The Near Reflex






  • The near response occurs when visual fixation shifts from far to near.


  • This is a triad of ocular convergence, pupillary constriction, and accommodation [25].


1.

Stimuli for the near reflex



  • Visual blur and crossed diplopia stimulate the near response.


  • This resulting in signal generation in cortical visual association areas and frontal eye fields (see Chap. 18, Neural Control of Eye Movements) [26].


  • These areas control the efferent pathways of the near reflex [27].

 

2.

Efferent pathways



  • Each arm of the triad is conveyed by distinct oculomotor nerve fibers


(i)

Miosis



  • Miosis involves the same E-W nuclei and efferent pathways involved in the light reflex [28].

 

(ii)

Accommodation



  • Accommodation fibers arise from E-W neurons distinct from those involved in miosis [29].


  • These synapse at the ciliary ganglion and innervate the ciliary muscle via the short ciliary nerves.


  • The accommodative fibers outnumber pupillary fibers 30:1 [5].

 

(iii)

Convergence



  • Convergence involves bilateral motor output to the medial recti from the oculomotor nuclei [28].

 

 


Pupil Reflex Dilation






  • The dilator pupillae cannot overcome the stronger sphincter pupillae without sphincter relaxation [5].


  • Iris sphincter relaxation is achieved by centrally mediated E-W inhibition.


1.

Tonic Edinger-Westphal nuclei inhibition

Oct 28, 2016 | Posted by in OPHTHALMOLOGY | Comments Off on The Iris and Pupil

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