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A wide angle allows sufficient drainage of humour through the trabecular meshwork (unless obstructed), whereas a narrow angle may impede the drainage system and leave the patient susceptible to acute angle-closure glaucoma. Gonioscopy indicates the angular width of the iridocorneal angle by the number of ocular structures visible above the rim ...
Iris Gonioscopy of the anterior chamber angle. Schwalbe's line is the anatomical line found on the interior surface of the eye's cornea, and delineates the outer limit of the corneal endothelium layer. Specifically, it represents the termination of Descemet's membrane. [1] In many cases it can be seen via gonioscopy. [2]
Iris Gonioscopy of the anterior chamber angle Anterior chamber angle cross-section imaged by an SD-OCT. The trabecular meshwork is an area of tissue in the eye located around the base of the cornea , near the ciliary body , and is responsible for draining the aqueous humor from the eye via the anterior chamber (the chamber on the front of the ...
The anterior chamber angle is a part of the eye located between the cornea and iris which contains the trabecular meshwork. The size of this angle is an important determinant of the rate aqueous humour flows out of the eye, and thus, the intraocular pressure. The anterior chamber angle is the structure which determines the anterior chamber depth.
The forensic term for the midpoint of the mandibular angle is the gonion. The gonion is a cephalometric landmark located at the lowest, posterior, and lateral point on the angle. [ 1 ] This site is at the apex of the maximum curvature of the mandible, where the ascending ramus becomes the body of the mandible.
It should not however, be used as a replacement for the gonioscopy examination but rather be used as a means of refuting or confirming the results of a gonioscopy examination. [ 3 ] The Van Herick's technique has become the most commonly used qualitative method of assessing the size of the anterior chamber angle (ACA).
Open-angle glaucoma (OAG) and closed-angle glaucoma (CAG) may be treated by muscarinic receptor agonists (e.g., pilocarpine), which cause rapid miosis and contraction of the ciliary muscles, this pulls the scleral spur and results in the trabecular meshwork being stretched and separated.
One peculiar feature of the anterior chamber is dampened immune response to allogenic grafts. This is called anterior chamber associated immune deviation (ACAID), a term introduced in 1981 by Streilein et al. [3] [4] This phenomenon is relevant to the fact that the eye is considered an "immune privileged site", like the brain and the testis.