Visual Pathways and Processing

Visual Pathways and Processing

Visual Pathways and Processing

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Retinal Roadmap - Light's First Steps

Light enters the eye, traversing transparent retinal layers before striking photoreceptors. This initiates the complex process of visual signal transduction and processing within the retina.

Retinal layers and light path diagram

  • Photoreceptors: Rods (scotopic/night vision, rhodopsin); Cones (photopic/day/color, iodopsin).
    • Light causes hyperpolarization (↓cGMP, Na+ channels close).
  • Bipolar Cells: First-order neurons; connect photoreceptors to Ganglion cells.
  • Ganglion Cells: Second-order neurons; axons form optic nerve. Types: M (motion), P (detail/color).
  • Horizontal & Amacrine Cells: Lateral inhibition in OPL & IPL respectively, sharpen contrast.

⭐ The fovea, packed with cones, offers maximal visual acuity. Optic disc is the blind spot as it lacks photoreceptors.

Nerve Highway - Axons & X-ings

  • Optic Nerve (CN II): RGC axons. Myelinated by oligodendrocytes (CNS) post-lamina cribrosa.
    • Lesion: Ipsilateral anopia (blindness in one eye).
  • Optic Chiasm: Partial decussation.
    • Nasal retinal fibers (temporal visual field) cross.
    • Temporal retinal fibers (nasal visual field) stay ipsilateral.
    • 📌 "Nasal Crosses".
    • Midline Lesion: Bitemporal hemianopia.

      ⭐ Pituitary adenoma is a classic cause of bitemporal hemianopia via chiasmal compression.

  • Optic Tract: Post-chiasm. Carries fibers from contralateral visual field.
    • Lesion: Contralateral homonymous hemianopia. image

LGN Relay & Radiations - Thalamic Traffic Control

  • LGN: Primary thalamic visual relay; 6 layers.
    • Magnocellular (M) layers (1,2): Motion, depth (M-ganglion cells).
    • Parvocellular (P) layers (3-6): Color, form, detail (P-ganglion cells).
    • Koniocellular (K) layers: Interlaminar; blue-yellow color.
    • Fiber origins: Contralateral eye (layers 1,4,6), Ipsilateral eye (layers 2,3,5). 📌 CILLI.
  • Optic Radiations: Axons from LGN to primary visual cortex (V1, Brodmann area 17).
    • Superior radiation (Parietal lobe): Carries inferior visual field info.
    • Inferior radiation / Meyer's Loop (Temporal lobe): Carries superior visual field info. 📌 PITS (Parietal-Inferior VF, Temporal-Superior VF). Visual Pathway: Optic Nerve to Occipital Pole

⭐ Lesion of Meyer's loop (temporal lobe) results in contralateral superior quadrantanopia ("pie in the sky").

Cortical Canvas - Brain's Vision HQ

  • Primary Visual Cortex (V1): Brodmann area 17, occipital lobe. Hub for basic visual features: orientation, spatial frequency, depth (binocular inputs).

  • Extrastriate Cortex: Areas V2-V5 refine visual data, contributing to perception.

  • Visual Processing Streams:

    • Dorsal Stream ("Where/How"): To Posterior Parietal Cortex. Analyzes motion, spatial relationships (object location, movement), guides interaction. 📌 "Dorsal for Direction & Doing".
    • Ventral Stream ("What"): To Inferior Temporal Cortex. Identifies objects, faces (e.g., Fusiform Face Area - FFA), colors, complex forms. Dorsal and Ventral Visual Pathways

⭐ Damage to V5 (MT area) can lead to akinetopsia (motion blindness).

Reflex Roundup - Automatic Eye Responders

  • Pupillary Light Reflex (PLR): CN II (afferent) → CN III (efferent). Direct & consensual miosis.
  • Accommodation (Near Triad): Convergence, miosis, lens thickening (CN III).
  • Corneal Reflex: CN V1 (afferent) → CN VII (efferent). Blink response.

⭐ Argyll Robertson Pupil (ARP): Light-Near Dissociation. Pupils accommodate but don't react to light (accommodate but don't react). Often linked to neurosyphilis.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Nasal fibers decussate at optic chiasm; temporal fibers ipsilateral.
  • LGN: contralateral eye to layers 1,4,6; ipsilateral eye to 2,3,5.
  • Meyer's loop (inf. radiations) lesion: contralateral superior quadrantanopia ("pie in sky").
  • Baum's loop (sup. radiations) lesion: contralateral inferior quadrantanopia ("pie on floor").
  • V1 (Area 17, occipital lobe): macular sparing common (dual supply: MCA/PCA).
  • "What" pathway (ventral): form/color (temporal); "Where" pathway (dorsal): motion/spatial (parietal).

Practice Questions: Visual Pathways and Processing

Test your understanding with these related questions

Keyhole-shaped visual field defect is seen in a lesion involving which of the following regions?

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Flashcards: Visual Pathways and Processing

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Wave V of BERA is produced by the _____

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Wave V of BERA is produced by the _____

lateral lemniscus

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