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  2. Ciliary body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciliary_body

    Relaxation of the ciliary muscle puts tension on these fibers and changes the shape of the lens in order to focus light on the retina. The inner layer is transparent and covers the vitreous body , and is continuous from the neural tissue of the retina .

  3. Sclera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sclera

    The thickness of the sclera varies from 1 mm at the posterior pole to 0.3 mm just behind the insertions of the four rectus muscles. The sclera's blood vessels are mainly on the surface. Along with the vessels of the conjunctiva (which is a thin layer covering the sclera), those in the episclera render the inflamed eye bright red. [6]

  4. Ciliary muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciliary_muscle

    The ciliary fibers have circular (Ivanoff), [12] longitudinal and radial orientations. [13] According to Hermann von Helmholtz's theory, the circular ciliary muscle fibers affect zonular fibers in the eye (fibers that suspend the lens in position during accommodation), enabling changes in lens shape for light focusing. When the ciliary muscle ...

  5. Anterior segment of eyeball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_segment_of_eyeball

    Diagram of anterior segment of a human eye (horizontal section of the right eye) 1. Lens, 2. Zonule of Zinn or ciliary zonule, 3. Posterior chamber and 4. Anterior chamber with 5. Aqueous humour flow; 6. Pupil, 7. Corneosclera with 8. Cornea, 9. Trabecular meshwork and Schlemm's canal. 10. Corneal limbus and 11. Sclera; 12. Conjunctiva, 13 ...

  6. Eye development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_development

    The extracellular mesenchyme forms the sclera, the corneal endothelium and stroma, blood vessels, muscles, and vitreous. The eye begins to develop as a pair of optic vesicles on each side of the forebrain at the end of the fourth week of pregnancy.

  7. Uvea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uvea

    The uvea (/ ˈ j uː v i ə /; [1] derived from Latin: uva meaning "grape"), also called the uveal layer, uveal coat, uveal tract, vascular tunic or vascular layer, is the pigmented middle layer of the three concentric layers that make up an eye, precisely between the inner retina and the outer fibrous layer composed of the sclera and cornea.

  8. Trabecular meshwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trabecular_meshwork

    Corneoscleral meshwork - Contains a large amount of elastin, arranged as a series of thin, flat, perforated sheets arranged in a laminar pattern; considered the ciliary muscle tendon. [ 2 ] Juxtacanalicular tissue (also known as the cribriform meshwork ) - Lies immediately adjacent to Schlemm's canal, composed of connective tissue ground ...

  9. Fibrous tunic of eyeball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrous_tunic_of_eyeball

    The sclera and cornea form the fibrous tunic of the bulb of the eye; the sclera is opaque, and constitutes the posterior five-sixths of the tunic; the cornea is transparent, and forms the anterior sixth. The term "corneosclera" is also used to describe the sclera and cornea together. [1]