enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Anterior chamber of eyeball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_chamber_of_eyeball

    The EZ ratio method is one way to calculate the estimated anterior chamber depth. [2] To start, the patient looks at a target in the distance with one eye covered. The examiner takes a digital photograph of the open, examined eye, from the side, perpendicular to the visual axis (a profile photograph).

  3. Van Herick technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Herick_technique

    The Van Herick's technique has become the most commonly used qualitative method of assessing the size of the anterior chamber angle (ACA). Whereby, it involves comparing the depth of the peripheral anterior chamber to the thickness of the cornea, when a narrow beam is shone within the limbus at a 60°angle. [4]

  4. Anterior chamber angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_chamber_angle

    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.

  5. Anterior segment of eyeball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_segment_of_eyeball

    The anterior segment or anterior cavity [1] is the front third of the eye that includes the structures in front of the vitreous humour: the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens. [2] [3] Within the anterior segment are two fluid-filled spaces: the anterior chamber between the posterior surface of the cornea (i.e. the corneal endothelium) and the ...

  6. Phakic intraocular lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phakic_intraocular_lens

    Anterior chamber depth (ACD, i.e. the distance between the crystalline lens and cornea including the corneal thickness) is required before the surgery and measured with the use of ultrasound. Iris-fixated IOLs are fixated to iris therefore they have the advantage of being one size (8.5 mm).

  7. Corneal topography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corneal_topography

    Corneal topography, also known as photokeratoscopy or videokeratography, is a non-invasive medical imaging technique for mapping the anterior curvature of the cornea, the outer structure of the eye. Since the cornea is normally responsible for some 70% of the eye's refractive power , [ 1 ] its topography is of critical importance in determining ...

  8. Mammalian eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammalian_eye

    The former, the anterior segment is the front sixth [8] of the eye that includes the structures in front of the vitreous humour: the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens. [6] [11] Within the anterior segment are two fluid-filled spaces: the anterior chamber between the posterior surface of the cornea (i.e. the corneal endothelium) and the iris.

  9. Globe (human eye) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globe_(human_eye)

    The globe of the eye, or bulbus oculi, is the frontmost sensory organ of the human ocular system, going from the cornea at the front, to the anterior part of the optic nerve at the back. More simply, the eyeball itself, as well as the ganglion cells in the retina that eventually transmit visual signals through the optic nerve.