視放線
PrepTutorEJDIC
- 目の;視覚の
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2016/05/09 23:18:39」(JST)
[Wiki en表示]
Optic radiation |
Colour-coded diagram showing radiations in quadrants from retinal disc through the brain
|
Details |
Identifiers |
Latin |
radiatio optica |
NeuroNames |
ancil-529 |
Dorlands
/Elsevier |
r_01/12686139 |
TA |
A14.1.08.673
A14.1.09.542
A14.1.09.547 |
FMA |
61941 |
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy
[edit on Wikidata]
|
The optic radiation (also known as the geniculocalcarine tract, the geniculostriate pathway, and posterior thalamic radiation) are axons from the neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus to the primary visual cortex. The optic radiation receives blood through deep branches of the middle cerebral artery and posterior cerebral artery.
They carry visual information through two divisions (called upper and lower division) to the visual cortex (also called striate cortex) along the calcarine fissure. There is one such tract on each side of the brain. If a lesion only exists in one optic radiation, the consequence is called quadrantanopia, which implies that only the respective superior or inferior quadrant of the visual field is affected.
Contents
- 1 Structure
- 2 Function
- 3 Clinical significance
- 4 Additional images
- 5 External links
Structure
The upper division:
-
- Projects to the upper bank of the calcarine fissure, called the cuneus
- Contains input from the superior retinal quadrants, which represents the inferior visual field quadrants
- Transection causes contralateral lower quadrantanopia
- Lesions that involve both cunei cause a lower altitudinal hemianopia (altitudinopia)
The lower division:
-
- Loops from the lateral geniculate body anteriorly (Meyer's loop), then posteriorly, to terminate in the lower bank of the calcarine sulcus, called the lingual gyrus
- Contains input from the inferior retinal quadrants, which represents the superior visual field quadrants
- Transection causes contralateral upper quadrantanopia
- Transection of both lingual gyri causes an upper altitudinal hemianopia
Parts
A distinctive feature of the optic radiations is that they split into two parts on each side:
Source |
Path |
Information |
Damage |
Fibers from the inferior retina (also called "Meyer's loop" or "Archambault's loop") |
must pass through the temporal lobe by looping around the inferior horn of the lateral ventricle. |
Carry information from the superior part of the visual field |
A lesion in the temporal lobe that results in damage to Meyer's loop causes a characteristic loss of vision in a superior quadrant (quadrantanopia or "pie in the sky" defect.) |
Fibers from the superior retina (also called "Baum's loop") |
travel straight back through the parietal lobe to the occipital lobe in the retrolenticular limb of the internal capsule to the visual cortex. |
Carry information from the inferior part of the visual field |
Taking the shorter path, these fibers are less susceptible to damage. Damage caused is characteristically called "Pie in the floor" defect or inferior quadrantanopia. |
Right superior quadrantanopia. The areas of the visual field lost in each eye are shown as black areas. This visual field defect is characteristic of damage to
Meyer's loop on the left side of the brain.
Function
The optic radiation contains tracts which transmit visual information from the retina of the eye to the visual cortex. Lesions of the optic radiations are usually unilateral and commonly vascular in origin. Field defects therefore develop abruptly, in contrast to the slow progression of defects associated with tumors.
Clinical significance
Examination
Tracts contained within the optic radiation are examined as part of a cranial nerve examination.
Additional images
-
Horizontal section of right cerebral hemisphere.
-
Diagram of the tracts in the internal capsule.
-
3D schematic representation of optic tracts
External links
|
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Optic radiation. |
- Kier LE, Staib LH, Davis, LM, Bronen, RA (1 May 2004). "MR Imaging of the Temporal Stem: Anatomic Dissection Tractography of the Uncinate Fasciculus, Inferior Occipitofrontal Fasciculus, and Meyer’s Loop of the Optic Radiation". Am J Neuroradiol 25 (5): 677–691. PMID 15140705. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
- http://www2.umdnj.edu/~neuro/studyaid/Practical2000/Q34.htm
- A 3D model of optic tract and optic radiation
Optical illusions
|
|
List of optical illusions
|
|
- Afterimage
- Barberpole
- Bezold
- Blivet
- Café wall
- Cornsweet
- Delboeuf
- Ebbinghaus
- Ehrenstein
- Flash lag
- Fraser spiral
- Grid
- Hering
- Jastrow
- Mach
- McCollough
- Müller-Lyer
- Necker
- Orbison
- Penrose
- Peripheral drift
- Poggendorff
- Ponzo
- Rubin
- Sander
- Schroeder
- Ternus
- Vertical–horizontal
- White's
- Wundt
- Zöllner
|
|
|
Related |
- Auditory
- Tactile
- Temporal
- Op art
- Ascending and Descending
- Waterfall
|
|
Anatomy of the diencephalon of the human brain
|
|
Epithalamus |
Surface |
- Pineal gland
- Habenula
- Habenular trigone
- Habenular commissure
|
|
Grey matter |
- Pretectal area
- Habenular nuclei
- Subcommissural organ
|
|
|
Thalamus |
Surface |
- Stria medullaris of thalamus
- Thalamic reticular nucleus
- Taenia thalami
|
|
Grey matter/
nuclei |
- paired: AN
- Ventral
- Lateral
- Metathalamus
- midline: MD
- Intralaminar
- Midline nuclear group
- Interthalamic adhesion
|
|
White matter |
- Mammillothalamic fasciculus
- Pallidothalamic tracts
- Ansa lenticularis
- Lenticular fasciculus
- Thalamic fasciculus
- PCML
- Medial lemniscus
- Trigeminal lemniscus
- Spinothalamic tract
- Lateral lemniscus
- Dentatothalamic tract
- Acoustic radiation
- Optic radiation
- Subthalamic fasciculus
- Anterior trigeminothalamic tract
|
|
|
Hypothalamus |
Surface |
- Median eminence/Tuber cinereum
- Mammillary body
- Infundibulum
|
|
Grey matter |
Autonomic zones |
- Anterior (parasympathetic/heat loss)
- Posterior (sympathetic/heat conservation)
|
|
Endocrine |
- posterior pituitary: Paraventricular
- Magnocellular neurosecretory cell
- Parvocellular neurosecretory cell
- Supraoptic
- other: Arcuate (dopamine/GHRH)
- Preoptic (GnRH)
- Suprachiasmatic (melatonin)
|
|
Emotion |
- Lateral
- Ventromedial
- Dorsomedial
|
|
|
White matter |
- afferent
- Medial forebrain bundle
- Retinohypothalamic tract
- efferent
- Mammillothalamic fasciculus
- Stria terminalis
- Dorsal longitudinal fasciculus
|
|
Pituitary |
- Posterior is diencephalon, but anterior is glandular
|
|
|
Subthalamus |
- Subthalamic nucleus
- Zona incerta
|
|
Rostral basal ganglia of the human brain and associated structures
|
|
Basal ganglia |
Grey matter |
Corpus striatum |
- Ventral striatum
- Nucleus accumbens
- Olfactory tubercle
|
|
Other |
|
|
|
White matter |
- Internal capsule
- Anterior limb
- Genu
- Posterior limb
- Optic radiation
- External capsule
- Extreme capsule
- Pallidothalamic tracts: Thalamic fasciculus
- Ansa lenticularis
- Lenticular fasciculus
- Subthalamic fasciculus
|
|
|
Rhinencephalon |
Grey matter |
- Anterior olfactory nucleus
- Anterior perforated substance
- Olfactory bulb
|
|
White matter |
- Olfactory tract
- Medial olfactory stria
- Lateral olfactory stria
- Olfactory trigone
|
|
|
Other basal forebrain |
Grey matter |
- Substantia innominata
- Basal optic nucleus of Meynert
- Nucleus of diagonal band
|
|
White matter |
- Diagonal band of Broca
- Stria terminalis
|
|
|
Archicortex:
Hippocampal formation/
Hippocampus anatomy |
Grey matter |
- Hippocampus proper
- Dentate gyrus
- Subiculum
|
|
White matter |
- Alveus
- Fimbria
- Perforant path
- Schaffer collateral
|
|
|
UpToDate Contents
全文を閲覧するには購読必要です。 To read the full text you will need to subscribe.
English Journal
- Visualization of nerve fiber orientation in gross histological sections of the human brain.
- Axer H1, Berks G, Keyserlingk DG.
- Microscopy research and technique.Microsc Res Tech.2000 Dec 1;51(5):481-92.
- Diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWMRI) allows visualization of the orientation of the nervous fibers in the living brain. For comparison, a method was developed to examine the orientation of fibers in histological sections of the human brain. Serial sections through the entire human b
- PMID 11074619
- [Hemianopsias in cortical and subcortical lesions of the visual system: what is the difference?].
- Baumgartner G1.
- Klinische Monatsblätter für Augenheilkunde.Klin Monbl Augenheilkd.1988 May;192(5):521-4.
- The neuronal correlate of perception in the visual area remains unimpaired in lesions of the optic tracts or the radiatio optica. Hemianopsias due to lesions of these pathways are perceived immediately. On the contrary, hemianopsias due to a lesion of the visual cortex are not perceived or are only
- PMID 3043100
Japanese Journal
- パーキンソン症候群に対する前脈絡動脈血行遮断の治療効果機転に関する実験的研究 第1編 前脈絡動脈の分布領域について
- パーキンソン症候群に対する前脈絡動脈血行遮断の治療効果機転に関する実験的研究 第2編 前脈絡動脈血行遮断による組織学的変化について
Related Links
- Radiatio optica definition at Dictionary.com, a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms and translation. Look it up now! Added to Favorites Dictionary Thesaurus Word Dynamo Quotes Reference Translator Spanish ] ...
- Fundstellen zu "Radiatio optica" im Internet, an Universitäten und in der Literatur... cyclopaedia.net cyclopaedia.net Twittern Radiatio optica Radiatio optica Der Occipitallappen (eingedeutschte Schreibweise: Okzipitallappen) oder ...
Related Pictures
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- optic radiation
- ラ
- radiatio optica
- 同
- 視線維放射、視放射、外側膝状体鳥距路 geniculocalcarine tract
[★]
- 関
- ocular、vision、visual