Topography of scleral emissaries and sclera-perforating blood vessels. 1985

M Norn

One hundred persons have been subjected to slit-lamp examination for scleral emissaries. The number registered per subject averaged 12.2. Such were most frequent superiorly at 12 o'clock and inferiorly at 6 o'clock, rarer nasally and the rarest temporally. The courses of the perforating blood vessels were equally often radial (30%), incyclo-directed (28%), and excylodirected (29%), whereas rarely parallel with the limbus corneae (10%), and even more rarely irregularly winding (3%). Episcleral pigmentation in relation to emissaries was most frequently observed superiorly and where the vessels ran radial and limbus-parallel courses, whereas rarely nasally and temporally and at excyclo-directed and winding courses.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000328 Adult A person having attained full growth or maturity. Adults are of 19 through 44 years of age. For a person between 19 and 24 years of age, YOUNG ADULT is available. Adults
D000368 Aged A person 65 years of age or older. For a person older than 79 years, AGED, 80 AND OVER is available. Elderly
D012168 Retinal Pigments Photosensitive protein complexes of varied light absorption properties which are expressed in the PHOTORECEPTOR CELLS. They are OPSINS conjugated with VITAMIN A-based chromophores. Chromophores capture photons of light, leading to the activation of opsins and a biochemical cascade that ultimately excites the photoreceptor cells. Retinal Photoreceptor Pigment,Retinal Pigment,Visual Pigment,Visual Pigments,Retinal Photoreceptor Pigments,Photoreceptor Pigment, Retinal,Photoreceptor Pigments, Retinal,Pigment, Retinal,Pigment, Retinal Photoreceptor,Pigment, Visual,Pigments, Retinal,Pigments, Retinal Photoreceptor,Pigments, Visual
D012590 Sclera The white, opaque, fibrous, outer tunic of the eyeball, covering it entirely excepting the segment covered anteriorly by the cornea. It is essentially avascular but contains apertures for vessels, lymphatics, and nerves. It receives the tendons of insertion of the extraocular muscles and at the corneoscleral junction contains the CANAL OF SCHLEMM. (From Cline et al., Dictionary of Visual Science, 4th ed) Scleral Spur,Scleral Spurs,Scleras

Related Publications

M Norn
January 2025, Clinical ophthalmology (Auckland, N.Z.),
M Norn
November 1999, Clinical orthopaedics and related research,
M Norn
July 1957, Anatomischer Anzeiger,
M Norn
July 1982, Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom,
M Norn
January 1952, Journal of the Royal Naval Medical Service,
M Norn
November 2013, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science,
M Norn
August 2017, Computers in biology and medicine,
Copied contents to your clipboard!