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  2. Extraocular muscles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraocular_muscles

    Four of the extraocular muscles have their origin in the back of the orbit in a fibrous ring called the common tendinous ring: the four recti muscles. The four recti muscles attach directly to the front half of the eye (anterior to the eye's equator), and are named after their straight paths. [5] Medial and lateral are relative terms.

  3. Eye movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_movement

    Six extraocular muscles facilitate eye movement. These muscles arise from the common tendinous ring (annulus of Zinn) in the orbit (eye cavity), and attach to the eyeball. The six muscles are the lateral, medial, inferior and superior recti muscles, and the inferior and superior oblique muscles. The muscles cause movement of the eyeball by ...

  4. Human eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_eye

    Each eye has seven extraocular muscles located in its orbit. [6] Six of these muscles control the eye movements , the seventh controls the movement of the upper eyelid . The six muscles are four recti muscles – the lateral rectus , the medial rectus , the inferior rectus , and the superior rectus , and two oblique muscles the inferior oblique ...

  5. Trochlea of superior oblique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trochlea_of_superior_oblique

    In fact, each of the six extraocular muscles exerts rotational forces in all three planes (elevation-depression, adduction-abduction, intorsion-extorsion) to varying degrees, depending on which way the eye is looking. The relative forces change every time the eyeball moves – every time the direction of gaze changes.

  6. Superior oblique muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_oblique_muscle

    The extraocular muscles rotate the eyeball around vertical, horizontal and antero-posterior axes. Extraocular muscles other than the medial rectus and lateral rectus have more than one action due to the angle they make with the optical axis of the eye while inserting into the eyeball. The superior and inferior oblique muscles make an angle of ...

  7. Common tendinous ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_tendinous_ring

    It is the common origin of the four recti muscles of the group of extraocular muscles. It can be used to divide the regions of the superior orbital fissure. [1] The arteries surrounding the optic nerve form a vascular structure known as the circle of Zinn-Haller, or sometimes as the circle of Zinn. [2]

  8. Lateral rectus muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_rectus_muscle

    The lateral rectus muscle is a muscle on the lateral side of the eye in the orbit. It is one of six extraocular muscles that control the movements of the eye . The lateral rectus muscle is responsible for lateral movement of the eyeball, specifically abduction.

  9. Orbit (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_(anatomy)

    The movement of the eye is controlled by six distinct extraocular muscles, a superior, an inferior, a medial and a lateral rectus, as well as a superior and an inferior oblique. The superior ophthalmic vein is a sigmoidal vessel along the superior margin of the orbital canal that drains deoxygenated blood from surrounding musculature.