|
EMR >> EMR Specialty
Ophthalmology
Electronic Medical Records
Ophthalmology
Ophthalmology
is the branch of medicine which deals with the diseases of
the eye and their treatment. The word ophthalmology comes
from the Greek roots ophthalmos meaning eye and logos
meaning word; ophthalmology literally means "the science of
eyes." As a discipline it applies to animal eyes also, since
the differences from human practice are surprisingly minor
and are related mainly to differences in anatomy or
prevalence, not differences in disease processes. By
convention the term ophthalmologist is more restricted and
implies a medically trained specialist. Since
ophthalmologists perform operations on eyes, they are
generally categorized as surgeons.
The eye, including its structure and mechanism, has
fascinated scientists and the public in general since
ancient times. The discovery of the eye went through two
cycles of limiting speculation and freeing observation,
which led to a dark age between Galen and Vesalius.
Arabic scientists are some of the earliest to have written
about and drawn the anatomy of the eye—the earliest known
diagram being in Hunain ibn Book of the Ten Treatises on the
Eye. Earlier manuscripts exist which refer to diagrams which
are not known to have survived. Current knowledge of the
Græco-Roman understanding of the eye is limited, as many
manuscripts lacked diagrams. In fact, there are very few
extant diagrams of the eye. Thus, it is not clear to which
structures the texts refer, and what purpose they were
thought to have.
The pre-Hippocratics largely based their
anatomical conceptions of the eye on speculation, rather
than empiricism. They recognised the sclera and transparent
cornea running flushly as the outer coating of the eye, with
an inner layer with pupil, and a fluid at the centre. It was
believed, by Alcamaeon and others, that this fluid was the
medium of vision and flowed from the eye to the brain via a
tube. Aristotle advanced such ideas with empiricism. He
dissected the eyes of animals, and discovering three layers
(not two), found that the fluid was of a constant
consistency with the lens forming (or congealing) after
death, and the surrounding layers were seen to be
juxtaposed. He, and his contemporaries, further put forth
the existence of three tubes leading from the eye, not one.
One tube from each eye met within the skull.
Alexandrian studies extensively contributed
to knowledge of the eye. Aëtius tells us that Herophilus
dedicated an entire study to they eye which no longer
exists. In fact, no manuscripts from the region and time are
known to have survived, leading us to rely on Celsius'
account—which is seen as a confused account written by a man
who did not know the subject matter. From Celsius it is
known that the lens had been recognised,and they no longer
saw a fluid flowing to the brain through some hollow fluid,
but likely a continuation of layers of tissue into the
brain. Celsius failed to recognise the retina's role, and
did not think it was the tissue that continued into the
brain.
Rufus recognized a more modern eye, with
conjunctiva, extending as a fourth epithelial layer over the
eye. Rufus was the first to recognise a two chambered eye -
with one chamber from cornea to lens (filled with water),
the other from lens to retina (filled with a egg-white-like
substance). Galen remedied some mistakes including the
curvature of the cornea and lens, the nature of the optic
nerve, and the existence of a posterior chamber. Though this
model was roughly a correct but simplistic modern model of
the eye, it contained errors. Yet it was not advanced upon
again until after Vesalius. A ciliary body was then
discovered and the sclera, retina, choroid and cornea were
seen to meet at the same point. The two chambers were seen
to hold the same fluid as well as the lens being attached to
the choroid. Galen continued the notion of a central canal,
though he dissected the optic nerve, and saw it was solid,
He mistakenly counted seven optical muscles, one too many.
He also knew of the tear ducts.
After Galen a period of speculation is again noted by Arab
scientists - the lens modified Galen's model to place the
lens in the middle of the eye, a notion which lasted until
Versalius reversed the era of speculation. He, however, was
not an ophthalmologist and taught of the eye to a more
primitive notion than both that of Galen and Arabian
scientists - the cornea was not seen as being of greater
curvature and the posterior side of the lens wasn't seen to
be larger.
Source: Wikipedia contributors (2005). Ophthalmology.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12:10, December
26, 2005 from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ophthalmology&oldid=32534415.
|