翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Trochilinae
・ Trochilocharax ornatus
・ Trochilus
・ Trochilus (mythology)
・ Trochina
・ Trochinella
・ Trochiodes
・ Trochiscia
・ Trochisciopsis
・ Trochistis
・ Trochita
・ Trochita trochiformis
・ Trochitenkalk Formation
・ Trochlea
・ Trochlea of humerus
Trochlea of superior oblique
・ Trochlear fovea
・ Trochlear nerve
・ Trochlear notch
・ Trochlear nucleus
・ Trochleitis
・ Trochocarpa
・ Trochocarpa clarkei
・ Trochocarpa laurina
・ Trochocarpa montana
・ Trochoceras
・ Trochocercus
・ Trochochlamys
・ Trochochlamys ogasawarana
・ Trochodendraceae


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Trochlea of superior oblique : ウィキペディア英語版
The trochlea of superior oblique is a pulley-like structure in the eye. The tendon of the superior oblique muscle passes through it. Situated on the superior nasal aspect of the frontal bone, it is the only cartilage found in the normal orbit. The word ''trochlea'' comes from the Greek word for pulley.==Actions of the superior oblique muscle==In order to understand the actions of the superior oblique muscle, it is useful to imagine the eyeball as a sphere that is constrained – like the trackball of a computer mouse – in such a way that only certain rotational movements are possible. Allowable movements for the superior oblique are (1) rotation in a vertical plane – looking down and up (''depression'' and ''elevation'' of the eyeball) and (2) rotation in the plane of the face (''intorsion'' and ''extorsion'' of the eyeball).The body of the superior oblique muscle is located ''behind'' the eyeball, but the tendon (which is redirected by the trochlea) approaches the eyeball from the ''front''. The tendon attaches to the top (superior aspect) of the eyeball at an angle of 51 degrees with respect to the ''primary position'' of the eye (looking straight forward). The force of the tendon’s pull therefore has two components: a forward component that tends to pull the eyeball downward (depression), and a medial component that tends to rotate the top of the eyeball toward the nose (intorsion).The relative strength of these two forces depends on which way the eye is looking. When the eye is ''adducted'' (looking toward the nose), the force of depression increases. When the eye is ''abducted'' (looking away from the nose), the force of intorsion increases, while the force of depression decreases. When the eye is in the primary position (looking straight ahead), contraction of the superior oblique produces depression and intorsion in roughly equal amounts.To summarize, the actions of the superior oblique muscle are (1) ''depression'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is adducted; and (2) ''intorsion'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is abducted. The clinical consequences of weakness in the superior oblique (caused, for example, by fourth nerve palsies) are discussed below.This summary of the superior oblique muscle describes its most important functions. However, it is an oversimplification of the actual situation. For example, the tendon of the superior oblique inserts ''behind'' the equator of the eyeball in the frontal plane, so contraction of the muscle also tends to ''abduct'' the eyeball (turn it outward). 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. The central control of this process, which involves the continuous, precise adjustment of forces on twelve different tendons in order to point both eyes in exactly the same direction, is truly remarkable.The recent discovery of soft tissue pulleys in the orbit – similar to the trochlea, but anatomically more subtle and previously missed – has completely changed (and greatly simplified) our understanding of the actions of the extraocular muscles.Demer JL. Pivotal Role of Orbital Connective Tissues in Binocular Alignment and Strabismus. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2004;45:729-738 Perhaps the most important finding is that a 2-dimensional representation of the visual field is sufficient for most purposes.

The trochlea of superior oblique is a pulley-like structure in the eye. The tendon of the superior oblique muscle passes through it. Situated on the superior nasal aspect of the frontal bone, it is the only cartilage found in the normal orbit. The word ''trochlea'' comes from the Greek word for pulley.
==Actions of the superior oblique muscle==

In order to understand the actions of the superior oblique muscle, it is useful to imagine the eyeball as a sphere that is constrained – like the trackball of a computer mouse – in such a way that only certain rotational movements are possible. Allowable movements for the superior oblique are (1) rotation in a vertical plane – looking down and up (''depression'' and ''elevation'' of the eyeball) and (2) rotation in the plane of the face (''intorsion'' and ''extorsion'' of the eyeball).
The body of the superior oblique muscle is located ''behind'' the eyeball, but the tendon (which is redirected by the trochlea) approaches the eyeball from the ''front''. The tendon attaches to the top (superior aspect) of the eyeball at an angle of 51 degrees with respect to the ''primary position'' of the eye (looking straight forward). The force of the tendon’s pull therefore has two components: a forward component that tends to pull the eyeball downward (depression), and a medial component that tends to rotate the top of the eyeball toward the nose (intorsion).
The relative strength of these two forces depends on which way the eye is looking. When the eye is ''adducted'' (looking toward the nose), the force of depression increases. When the eye is ''abducted'' (looking away from the nose), the force of intorsion increases, while the force of depression decreases. When the eye is in the primary position (looking straight ahead), contraction of the superior oblique produces depression and intorsion in roughly equal amounts.
To summarize, the actions of the superior oblique muscle are (1) ''depression'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is adducted; and (2) ''intorsion'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is abducted. The clinical consequences of weakness in the superior oblique (caused, for example, by fourth nerve palsies) are discussed below.
This summary of the superior oblique muscle describes its most important functions. However, it is an oversimplification of the actual situation. For example, the tendon of the superior oblique inserts ''behind'' the equator of the eyeball in the frontal plane, so contraction of the muscle also tends to ''abduct'' the eyeball (turn it outward). 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. The central control of this process, which involves the continuous, precise adjustment of forces on twelve different tendons in order to point both eyes in exactly the same direction, is truly remarkable.
The recent discovery of soft tissue pulleys in the orbit – similar to the trochlea, but anatomically more subtle and previously missed – has completely changed (and greatly simplified) our understanding of the actions of the extraocular muscles.〔Demer JL. Pivotal Role of Orbital Connective Tissues in Binocular Alignment and Strabismus. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2004;45:729-738〕 Perhaps the most important finding is that a 2-dimensional representation of the visual field is sufficient for most purposes.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The trochlea of superior oblique is a pulley-like structure in the eye. The tendon of the superior oblique muscle passes through it. Situated on the superior nasal aspect of the frontal bone, it is the only cartilage found in the normal orbit. The word ''trochlea'' comes from the Greek word for pulley.==Actions of the superior oblique muscle==In order to understand the actions of the superior oblique muscle, it is useful to imagine the eyeball as a sphere that is constrained – like the trackball of a computer mouse – in such a way that only certain rotational movements are possible. Allowable movements for the superior oblique are (1) rotation in a vertical plane – looking down and up (''depression'' and ''elevation'' of the eyeball) and (2) rotation in the plane of the face (''intorsion'' and ''extorsion'' of the eyeball).The body of the superior oblique muscle is located ''behind'' the eyeball, but the tendon (which is redirected by the trochlea) approaches the eyeball from the ''front''. The tendon attaches to the top (superior aspect) of the eyeball at an angle of 51 degrees with respect to the ''primary position'' of the eye (looking straight forward). The force of the tendon’s pull therefore has two components: a forward component that tends to pull the eyeball downward (depression), and a medial component that tends to rotate the top of the eyeball toward the nose (intorsion).The relative strength of these two forces depends on which way the eye is looking. When the eye is ''adducted'' (looking toward the nose), the force of depression increases. When the eye is ''abducted'' (looking away from the nose), the force of intorsion increases, while the force of depression decreases. When the eye is in the primary position (looking straight ahead), contraction of the superior oblique produces depression and intorsion in roughly equal amounts.To summarize, the actions of the superior oblique muscle are (1) ''depression'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is adducted; and (2) ''intorsion'' of the eyeball, especially when the eye is abducted. The clinical consequences of weakness in the superior oblique (caused, for example, by fourth nerve palsies) are discussed below.This summary of the superior oblique muscle describes its most important functions. However, it is an oversimplification of the actual situation. For example, the tendon of the superior oblique inserts ''behind'' the equator of the eyeball in the frontal plane, so contraction of the muscle also tends to ''abduct'' the eyeball (turn it outward). 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. The central control of this process, which involves the continuous, precise adjustment of forces on twelve different tendons in order to point both eyes in exactly the same direction, is truly remarkable.The recent discovery of soft tissue pulleys in the orbit – similar to the trochlea, but anatomically more subtle and previously missed – has completely changed (and greatly simplified) our understanding of the actions of the extraocular muscles.Demer JL. Pivotal Role of Orbital Connective Tissues in Binocular Alignment and Strabismus. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2004;45:729-738 Perhaps the most important finding is that a 2-dimensional representation of the visual field is sufficient for most purposes.」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.