Time for another
post about the human eye, this week we are looking at the iris, I’m sure we all
know that the iris is part of our eyes but how many know its purpose or how
it’s made up.
Light has to enter
the eye in order for us to see, too much light can damage the eye, but too
little light means we can’t see clearly. The eye has its own built-in mechanism
for regulating this, the iris.
The iris is made up
of two sets of muscle fibres; there is the radial muscles that run from the
outside edge of the iris towards the centre. Then there are the circular
muscles that form the inner rim of the iris and are arranged is a series of
rings.
These muscles
contract in response to signals from the brain, when one contracts the other
relaxes, we cannot make them contract by thinking about it, they just do it
when needed. Controlling the size of the iris controls how much light enters
the eye.
The radial and
circular muscles have opposite effects, when the circular muscles contract they
pull the radial muscles inward, shrinking the size of the pupil, when the
radical muscles contract they pull the circular muscles outwards the size of
the pupil increases.
So, in normal light
they are balanced, when in bright light they contract and in dim light they increase.
The drops that are
put in your eyes when they are being checked cause the pupil to enlarge making
it easier for them to be examined.
The complexity of the Iris, thanks Jo-Anne.
ReplyDeleteMore complex then I knew
DeleteThe eye is a miracle all to itself, Jo-Anne. Fascinating info!
ReplyDeleteI agree
DeleteHow timely! I have an appointment with the eye doctor tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteTim had his eye check up yesterday
Delete