“Aye, Eye – The Eyes – Part 2!”

Greetings faithful anatomy students! Today we continue our studies of the complex and elegant eye in Anatomy Lesson #30, The Eyes – Part 2. Anatomy Lesson #29 covered anatomy and function of eyelids, eyebrows and eyelashes. Today, we will discuss other structures that are designed to aid the eye in the vision it provides: bony orbit, orbital fat (yes indeed!), conjunctiva, lacrimal apparatus, and extraocular muscles.

And just to set the mood, eyes are extremely important in the English language. A quick glance (ha ha) yields more than 200 eye idioms: catch one’s eye, apple of one’s eye, in the blink of an eye, more than meets the eye, in a pig’s eye, all eyes and ears, a bird’s eye view, a sight for sore eyes, easy on the eyes, bedroom eyes (we know who has THOSE! ?), can’t take eyes off of, eye for an eye, catch one’s eye. Well, you get the idea…references to the eye makes English more colorful! Blink. Blink. Wink. Wink.

SPOILER ALERT: early in this lesson a wee spoiler appears from Diana’s eighth book of the Outlander series: no names, no dates, and no places. A warning will surface beforehand. Look for this (heehee…this is going to be fun!) obnoxious, glaring, flashing sign so you can skip and not whinge about something you would rather not read. Don’t say I didn’t warn ye!

warning

Let’s begin this lesson by considering the bony home for the eye. Each eyeball dwells in a cave known as the bony orbit (Photo A – dashed black line). Each orbit is composed of skull bones, some of which are so thin they readily transmit light (Photo A – black arrow). It isn’t even Halloween yet – Boo! ?

Bony-orbit-KLS-edited

Photo A

A whopping seven skull bones form each bony orbit. These are difficult to distinguish in the adult skull where the bones are fused, but easily discerned using a color coded image (Photo B – right bony orbit):

Blue = fontal bone

Orange = zygomatic bone

Green = maxillary bone

Violet = lacrimal bone

Grey = ethmoid bone

Pink = palatine bone

Gold = sphenoid bone

The bony orbits protect and support the eyeballs and provide attachment for several accessory structures. Although difficult to appreciate in a two-dimensional figure, each orbit is shaped like a cone: the apex (point) lies at the back and the base, or orbital rim, faces front (Photo B – dashed black line). Each apex has holes which serve as access ports for nerves and blood vessels to enter and leave the bony orbit (Photo B – red stars). The orbital rim, roof and temporal (side) walls are thick and strong but the nasal (medial) wall and part of the floor are thin and delicate (Photo B – black arrows). In fact, each medial wall is so thin it is known as the lamina papyracea (Latin meaning paper layer)!

Figure0002B-KLS-edited

Photo B

Indeed, a direct blow to the bony rim can break any of walls but the medial wall and floor are most commonly disrupted. Known as a “blowout” fracture, this injury appears in one of Diana’s prolific writings!

SORTA SPOILER ALERT: The following quote describes this type of injury. If you don’t want to read it skip the next two quotes and images and head straight for the furry mammal with the big eyes. NO! Not Rupert! It has orange eyes and Rupert doesn’t.

warning

Herself correctly describes the consequences of a blowout fracture suffered by a character in her 8th book, Written in My Own Heart’s Blood, a.k.a. Moby. Claire relates:

A split lip and badly swollen eye seemed to be the chief injuries… The eye was swollen half shut …the underlying flesh a lurid palette of green, purple, and ghastly yellow. The eye itself was red as a flannel petticoat … I couldn’t move the globe of the eyeball upward at all…

Clinical Correlation #1: Photo C shows the appearance of a right eye (on your left) with a classic blowout fracture juxtaposed with a normal left eye. The left eye has a white sclera, normal skin of eyelids and cheek and, when tested, the patient can elevate (lift) the normal eye. The right eye is patently abnormal: the sclera is red due to hemorrhage and the eyelids and cheek are bruised and swollen also due to hemorrhage. The right eyeball cannot be raised in tandem with the left eye; it is frozen with the gaze directed forward. Failure to elevate the right eye occurs because a small muscle of the eyeball (inferior rectus – see below) is trapped within the fracture, anchoring the globe and preventing its lift.

_136_blowout1 KLS edited

Photo C:

And, continuing the quote from Moby – again, Dr. Sassynach is our observer:

It was almost certainly what was called a “blowout” fracture, which had cracked the delicate bone of the orbital floor and forced a displaced bit of it—along with part of the inferior rectus muscle—down into the maxillary sinus. The edge of the muscle was caught in the crack, thus immobilizing the eyeball.”

YOU CAN LOOK NOW!

lemur-rupert

See, I told ye it wasna Rupert!

Photo D is a vertical CT scan through the skull. The paired ghoulish-looking white rings are the bony orbits. The patient’s left orbit (on your right) is normal; the black triangular space below it is the normal left maxillary sinus. These are separated by a thin white line, the orbital floor (Photo D – green arrow). The patient’s right eye shows a blowout fracture. The red arrow points to the white, broken and dangling bony bit of the orbital floor. The right maxillary sinus is grey because it is filled with displaced orbital tissues: the light grey material is prolapsed orbital fat (see below) and the aforementioned inferior rectus muscle (Photo D – blue arrow) which is trapped in the fracture anchoring the eyeball so it cannot be elevated. Very interesting stuff!

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Photo D

Now, structures other than eyeballs inhabit the bony orbits, including extraocular muscles, blood vessels, nerves and orbital fat. However, the eyeballs do not touch the bones of the orbit. Rather, they rest-in-a-nest of orbital fat that fills all the nooks and crannies not otherwise occupied. Orbital fat acts like a shock absorber cushioning the eyeball against trauma; it also serves as a socket in which each orb glides, slides and rotates. Photo E shows a horizontal section through the right eyeball and bony orbit; the cone shape of the bony orbit is easily appreciated from this birds-eye view (Photo E – black dashed lines). For orientation, the cornea and superior tarsus are labelled (Anatomy Lesson #29). See the yellow globs of “stuff” surrounding the eyeball? This is orbital fat and it is surprisingly abundant! Periorbital fat is also present but it lies superficial to the bony orbit being confined to eyelid margins and overlying orbital rim and cheek bone/zygomatic arch  (Anatomy Lesson #8).

Try this: Close one eye and gently tap the soft tissues around the eyelids and overlying the orbital rim and zygomatic arch. Feel the springy and spongy nature of the soft tissues? This is periorbital fat. Orbital fat lies deep in the bony orbit and cannot be readily palpated.

Figure0079A-orbital-fat-KLS-edited

Photo E

Most of the exposed eye is covered with the conjunctiva, a transparent, vascular mucous membrane. Bulbar conjunctiva overlies the sclera (white part) of the eyeball but it stops at the corneal rim and hence, does not cover the cornea. Palpebral conjunctiva lines upper and lower eyelids (Photo F).

Figure0077A conjunctiva KLS edited

Photo F

This design is possible because the conjunctiva reflects (turns) from the sclera onto the insides of upper and lower eyelids (Anatomy Lesson #29). This reflection creates a blind pocket or fornix where the sheet of conjunctiva turns from one surface onto another (Photo G – vertical section through eyeball and lids of eye). Thus, objects trapped on the exposed surface of the eyeball (e.g. contact lens) cannot move into the deep recesses of the bony orbit unless the conjunctival fornix is torn. The conjunctiva secretes mucus and contributes to the tear film (see below); it also produces immune cells that help protect the eyeball from microbes.

Figure0077B conjunctival fornices KLS edited

Photo G

Now, it is time to consider the lacrimal apparatus (Latin meaning tears), an uppity name for the system which produces and drains tears. The lacrimal apparatus for each eye includes a lacrimal gland, lacrimal canaliculi, lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct.

The lacrimal gland is roughly the size and shape of a large almond. Most of it lies inside the bony orbit but a smallish part sits in the outer upper eyelid (Photo H). The purpose of the gland is to secrete (discharge) the aqueous part of the tear film. Several small ducts (tubes) pierce the conjunctiva and empty the secretion onto the surface of the eyeball.

Figure0078A-lacrimal-apparatus-KLS-edited

Photo H

As the palpebral parts of orbicularis oculi (Anatomy Lesson #29) close the eyelids, the tear film sweeps across the exposed surface of the eyeball. To understand where it goes next, please see Photo I. Near the nasal ends of upper and lower eyelids, the eyelashes (Anatomy Lesson #29) disappear and small elevations appear on the lids; these are superior and inferior lacrimal papillae (pl.). Each papilla bears a small opening, the lacrimal punctum.

Try this: Face a mirror and gently pull down on the lower eyelid. See the small bump near the medial canthus (Anatomy Lesson #29)? This is the inferior lacrimal papilla. Find its tiny opening, the inferior lacrimal punctum. Repeat with the upper lid.

Figure0077A lacrimal papillae and punctum KLS edited

Photo I

As the eyelids close, the tear film is swept toward the lacrimal puncta (pl.). Tears then enter the puncta and drain through the next group of lacrimal structures: lacrimal canaliculi (pl.), lacrimal sac and nasolacrimal duct. The paired lacrimal canaliculi are tiny ducts, each leading from its respective punctum to the lacrimal sac, an enlargement at the side of each nasal cavity. Tears then drain into the longer nasolacrimal duct.

Figure0078A lacrimal sac and duct KLS edited

Photo J

The nasolacrimal duct opens into the outer wall of each nasal cavity (Photo K – outer wall of right nasal cavity) under shelter of the inferior concha (Anatomy Lesson #28). After collecting in the nose, we blow out or swallow our tear film.

Hard to believe, but the thin tear film (40 µm or .0016 in) has three layers: 1) a deep mucous layer made by specialized conjunctival cells; 2) a middle aqueous film produced by the lacrimal glands; 3) an outermost lipid sheet released by tarsal glands (Anatomy Lesson #29).

Excessive tearing caused by pain or intense emotion, floods the lacrimal system, spills over the cheeks and fills the nasal cavity; this is why our nose “runs” when we weep.

Figure0033C nasolacrimal duct KLS edited

Photo K

Can we see lacrimation (flow of tears) at work in Starz episodes? Oh, aye! Claire is a strong 20th century woman but I count at least six season one episodes where she weeps. This is my favorite: the lass is touchingly, tenderly tearful while confronting her beloved hubby about his intent to end it all (Starz episode 116, To Ransom a Man’s Soul). Intense emotions have her lacrimal system in full flush!

epi 116 Claire tears KLS edited

Speaking of crying, Jamie presents us with a gut-wrenching, Emmy-worthy (AHEM!) performance as a single tear overflows his lid and slips down his face. Bound by his word, he stays absolutely still as the wicked wolverine (oops, Wolverton) of Wentworth messes with his scars (Starz, episode 115, Wentworth Prison). Ugh! Puir lad!

ep 115 Jamie tears 03 KLS edited

In addition to the above structures, each eyeball is moved by six extraocular muscles (intraocular muscles are inside the eyeball). These are all voluntary, strap-like muscles: four are recti (pl., Latin meaning straight) and two are oblique. The four recti muscles arise at the apex of the bony orbit, pass directly forward and attach to the eyeball like the hours on a clock face. In a left eyeball (Photo L – left eye) superior rectus inserts at the 12:00 position, inferior rectus at 6:00, lateral rectus at 3:00, and medial rectus at 9:00. Understand that the positions of medial and lateral recti are reversed in a right eyeball: medial rectus inserts at 3:00 and lateral rectus at 9:00. Superior oblique and inferior oblique are so named because they approach and insert into the eyeball at oblique angles.

Figure0080C extraocular muscles KLS edited

Figure L

Movements of the head provide coarse adjustments to eye position but the extraocular muscles produce fine movements of the eyes. The four recti move each eye in linear directions: up (elevate), down (depress), toward the nose (adduct) and toward the ears (abduct). Oblique muscles roll each eye inward toward the nose (intorsion) or outward toward the ears (extorsion). The table below shows the main movements attributed to each of the six extraocular muscles. Each of these movements is aided by other extraocular muscles but these combos are beyond the scope of this lesson. Extraocular muscle movements are complex and require activation by three pairs of cranial nerves (from the brain) and several brain centers (too complex for our lesson).

Superior rectus Inferior rectus Medial rectus Lateral rectus Superior oblique Inferior oblique
elevates depresses adducts abducts intorsion extorsion

Each extraocular muscle has a yoke muscle that operates in concert to coordinate the gaze. For example, when we gaze to the right, the left medial rectus adducts the left eyeball and the right lateral rectus abducts the right eyeball. When we gaze to the left, the opposite muscle actions occur. Ditto for the obliques: as we roll our eyes to the right, the right inferior oblique contracts in tandem with the left superior oblique. The opposite muscles engage as our eyes roll to the left.

NOTE: both medial recti muscles adduct our eyes as we examine near objects but we will revisit this issue in the next eye lesson. Personally, I have never known a person who could simultaneously contract both lateral rectus muscles to abduct the eyes (eyeballs point toward the ears) although in an 1837 article from The London Medical Gazette, the author states that some men (?) can perform this maneuver. What about those lassies?

Speaking of maneuvers…get a keek of this! Och! All those lovely eye muscles working in tandem give us that gaze! Gah!

KDkzrNYrTi

A simplistic description of the extraocular muscles at work can be seen at this link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4RxYRpIqLs!

Or, for an interactive and sophisticated version, try this link. It’s a bit involved but here’s how it works: go to the site http://www.bmc.med.utoronto.ca/anatomia/intro.swf, select orbit, then select structure & function, and lastly, select extraocular muscles. On the right is a giant H with a four-arrow circle. Capture the circle with your mouse and move it along the H to activate and view the six extraocular muscles at work. Very cool!

Hey, here’s a novel idea, let’s use more Starz episodes to help us understand eye movements! Time for Claire to hop onto the dissection table: here she contracts both superior recti to elevate her eyes (Starz, episode 103, The Way Out). She’s had, oh, um, roughly one hogshead of Colum’s finest rhenish wine – she canna really recall but enough to drop Angus under the table. Even Jamie is waaay impressed! Claire’s eyes also demonstrate an interesting Eye Rule #1: lift the eyes – lift the lids meaning levator palpebrae superioris (Anatomy Lesson #29) and superior recti muscles contract together.

Try this: close both eyelids. Now attempt to elevate the eyes while keeping the eyelids closed. You’ll find it is difficult to almost impossible because of Eye Rule #1: lift the eyes – lift the lids.  If you can lift your eyes while keeping the lids closed, then per Rudyard Kipling (the (wo) is my addition):

By the livin’ Gawd that made you,

You’re a better (wo)man than I am, Gunga Din!

103 Claire elevation KLS edited

Claire is still in the dissection lab as both inferior rectus muscles contract to depress her eyes (Starz, episode 109, The Reckoning). Note that her upper eyelids are also lowered. She’s totally pissed at Jamie ‘cause his sword belt gave her a licking (Not the only lickin’ she gets. Snort)! Now, I could be wrong, but isna she wrapping her hair with an elastic band in prep for beddy bye sans Big Red One? Har har. Don’t think those bands were invented for another century or so. Eye Rule #2: lower the eyes – lower the lids; as the eyes depress (look down), the eyelids lower; inferior recti and palpebral part of orbicularis oculi contracting together. Yes! Bravo!

Try this: With eyelids widely open, try depressing your eyes. It is possible but verra difficult.

ep 109 Claire depress 01 KLS edited

Ooooh! If looks could kill, Claire would be six feet under right here, right now! Casting the evil eye, wee wily LegHair (dissing the character not the awesome actress!) glares at Claire and Jamie as they share wine, words, gazes and body heat (Starz, episode 103, The Way Out)! Yoked together, her right lateral rectus abducts the right eye and her left medial rectus adducts the left eye. Her eyes are slightly elevated because her head is tilted to the right. Got it? Super-duper!

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Now, LogHare isna the only character who can coordinate eye movements: fury and fear curdle Jamie’s wame as he watches Black-Jack-Rat run a dagger tip along Claire’s linea alba (Anatomy Lesson #16). He’s so friggin’ mad and scairt he can scarcely contain himself (Starz episode 109, The Reckoning). Yoked together, the right medial rectus adducts his right eye and the left lateral rectus abducts his left eye. Both eyes are also slightly elevated because his chin is tilted down. This keeps his gaze focused on the “object” of interest – rat man. Ye ken? Grand!

ep 109 Jamie abduct adduct 01 KLS edited

Let’s finish this lesson with some interesting tidbits about leeches (Hirudo medicinalis). Ahhh… What do leeches have to do with eyes? Well, hang on and let’s find out! Leeches have a long shared history with humankind. A mural from an 18th dynasty tomb in Thebes shows that leeches were used for medical purposes as early as 1300 B.C. Later, Latin and Greek writers Plautus, Cicero and Horace wrote of medicinal leeches using the names of bdella, sanguisuga or hirudo. The English word leech is from the Old English word “laece,” meaning doctor! Yikes! Today, many modern medical centers employ leeches in plastic surgery and trauma medicine especially to relieve venous congestion (Photo M). Mother Nature at her verra best!

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Photo M

In the 18th century, medical practitioners transported leeches in special containers. Talk about fancy pet carriers! These beasties were not only placed on the skin but in some pretty hard to reach areas such as mouth, conjunctiva, rectum and vagina (Photo N – 18th & 19th century leech carriers). The clear tube at the bottom of this pic was used for placement in hard-to-reach places!

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Photo N

And, when not being transported, leeches were kept in some verra purty jars. Nice housing, guys!

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Photo O

Herself writes about leeches and healing in Outlander book. After Rupert beats Jamie in the great hall, Mrs. Fitz places leeches on his swollen face. Claire describes the event:

“That eye, now, lad, let’s have a look at that.”… “Still bleedin’ under the skin. Leeches will help, then.” She lifted the cover from the bowl, revealing several small dark sluglike objects, an inch or two long, covered with a disagreeable-looking liquid. Scooping out two of them, she pressed one to the flesh just under the brow bone and the other just below the eye… she explained to me, “once a bruise is set, like, leeches do ye no good. But where ye ha’ a swellin’ like this, as is still comin’ up, that means the blood is flowin’ under the skin, and leeches can pull it out… When ye use ’em on an old bruise, they just take healthy blood, and it does the bruise no good.”

The fabulous leech scene was filmed but edited from the aired version (Starz episode 102, Castle Leoch). So, here’s a wee bit of the deleted footage where Mrs. Fitz works leech magic (purported to be black licorice) on Jamie’s red and swollen left eye and cheek (see gif). Rupert’s eye punch broke blood vessels that hemorrhaged into extraorbital fat and loose connective tissue of eyelids, brow and cheek. Had the punch directly hit the bony orbit and eye, Jamie could have suffered a blowout fracture!

Claire de-claires (ha ha) that the leech-leach induces remarkable improvement, but she also uses this as a chance to cradle Jamie’s face. Yep! This lass just wants to pet that lad’s epidermis!  Hang on, Claire – more skin touching is, erm, coming!

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Eyes are endlessly amazing and today, we learned more about their accessory structures. Next lesson, we will study the eyeballs! For now, let’s end today’s fascinating topic with a quote about the oblique muscle action from funnyman Jim Carrey:

“Behind every great man is a woman rolling her eyes.”

A deeply grateful,

Outlander Anatomist

photo creds: Starz, www.sussexvt.k12.de.us (warning gif), Medicine: Perspectives in History and Art by R. E. Greenspan, 2006 (Photo O – 19th century leech jars), Netter’s Atlas of Human Anatomy, 4th ed. (Photos B – L), www.aapos.org (image of blowout fracture), www.collectmedicalantiques.com (Photo N – image of leech carriers), www.leeches-medicinalis.com/the-leeches/biology (Photo M – image of leech), www.radiopaedia.org (CT image of blowout fracture), http://funny-pics-fun.com (lemur)

Anatomy Lesson #29: The Eyes Have It!

ep 109 Dougal eyebrows 01 KLS editedAn apocryphal story about Abraham Lincoln, 16th US President, claims he was taking a vote during a cabinet meeting on whether or not to sign the Emancipation Proclamation. All of his cabinet secretaries voted nay, whereupon Lincoln raised his right hand and declared: “The ayes have it!” 🤗

Today, the “eyes have it” as we begin a discussion which, due to complexity, will span more than one anatomy lesson! So, welcome all students to the first in a series of eye lessons: Anatomy Lesson #29, The Eyes Have It!

The eye is arguably the most elegant and complex sense organ of the human body. Its duty is to provide vision thereby increasing our perception of both inner and outer worlds (Photo A). John Ruskin (1819 – 1920), a leading English art critic of the Victorian era, put vision into clear perspective: “The greatest thing a human soul ever does in this world is to see… To see clearly is poetry, prophecy and religion, all in one.”

Eye KLS edited

photo A

The eyeball is marvelous but it doesn’t work in a vacuum. Surely, you’ve read about celebrities who are accompanied by a full entourage of assistants? Well, the eyeball has a similar assemblage. For the eyeball to work optimally, it requires help from a small host of accessory structures: eyebrows, eyelids, eyelashes, bony orbit, periorbital fat, lacrimal apparatus and extrinsic muscles. Today, we will learn how eyelids, eyebrows and eyelashes augment vision.

We’ll start today’s anatomy lesson with the eyebrows, a major human facial feature. In anatomy, the eyebrow is known as the supercilium (pl. supercilia). Eyebrows are linear growths of coarse hair that protect the eyeballs from the sun’s rays as well as sweat, rain, dandruff and other debris. The Greek physician Herophilos (335-280 B.C.) first suggested that the brows are “adorned with hair, so that if copious perspiration came, it would be contained by this ‘check-point’ of hair placed in its way until it is wiped off, so that it could not obstruct the eyes.” The eyebrow arch favors this explanation as it typically peaks over the eye and slants to each side ensuring that moisture wicks around the eyeball and towards temple or nose.

Delicious Dougal-Dude exhibits a fine example of manly arched brows; brow power to the max as he reminds Colum that he is dad-of-the-lad, Hamish. Colum should be grateful; after all, Dougal was showing fealty by lying wi’ his laird’s lovely Lady Letitia (Starz episode 109, The Reckoning).

ep 109 Dougal eyebrows 01 KLS edited

Besides protecting the eyeballs, eyebrows are vital in human communication by signaling mood changes such as anger, surprise, concern and even sexiness. Jamie’s eyebrows are furiously flapping in this Starz scene (episode 109, The Reckoning). Och! Weel, Claire’s dark dirk dare is agonizing for Jamie – runs counter to the man’s natural instincts. Ken the distress telegraphed by his eyebrows? At this point, yes, yes, lassie! Anything!

ep 109 Jamie brows KLS edited

Eyebrows also add major definition to the face. In a recent MIT study, subjects were asked to identify celebrities whose eyes or eyebrows had been digitally erased. Surprise! Subjects could correctly identify 60% of celebrities if eyes were blocked but only 46% if eyebrows were erased suggesting that eyebrows are more significant than eyes in identifying faces.

We humans like to mess with our anatomy and eyebrows are no exception: tattooing, waxing, plucking, brushing, coloring, trimming, stenciling, darkening, shaving, piercing, tweezing and threading (Photo B). And, of course, cosmetic surgery can lift eyebrows or Botox can be used to reduce skin lines near the brows to create a more youthful look.

Beauty eyes makeup closeup. Long eyelashes, perfect skin

photo B

Time for an eyebrow quote from Outlander book:

“Because I want to look at you,” I said. He was beautifully made, with long graceful bones and flat muscles that flowed smoothly from the curves of chest and shoulder to the slight concavities of belly and thigh. He raised his eyebrows. “Well then, fair’s fair. Take off yours”…

Here ye go. Breathe! Panting is OK, but no fainting (Starz episode 107, The Wedding)!

ep 107 Jamie eyebrows KLS edited

Next up, anatomy of the palpebrae (pl.) or eyelids. Eyelids (Anatomy Lesson #11) are moveable flaps of skin that overlie the eyeballs. Upper and lower lids join on the nasal side at the medial canthus (Photo C – red arrow); the lateral canthus marks their fusion at the temporal side (Photo C – blue arrow). The elliptical opening between the eyelids is the palpebral fissure.

The upper lid is larger and more mobile than the lower and each lid covers the eyeball differently. With the eyelids open, the upper lid normally overlaps the upper cornea (and deeper-lying iris) but the lower lid sits just below the cornea (Photo C). With the eyelids closed, the upper lid moves down to cover the entire cornea. Note: if the lids of an eye at rest are open widely such that the entire cornea (and iris) is exposed, then one should consider being evaluated for possible causes (Grave’s disease, orbital cellulitis, exophthalmos, to name a few).

Try this: Open your eyelids and gaze into a mirror. Find medial and lateral canthi (pl.). Where are your eyelids relative to the iris (the iris is the best landmark because the transparent cornea is difficult to identify in a forward gaze)? Close the eyelids and gently probe the corneal bulge and realize that in this position, the upper lid completely covers the cornea.

photo-C-edited

photo C

Except for parts of the external genitalia, eyelid skin is the thinnest of the entire body. Each lid contains a flexible connective tissue plate: the superior tarsus of the upper lid and inferior tarsus of the lower lid. Tarsi (pl.) add body and shape to the eyelids allowing them to cup the eyeball surface (Photo D – vertical section through eyelids and eyeball). Eyelids close to protect the eyeball from trauma, debris, and excessive light; they also help create the tear film and spread it across the eyeball surface.

Try this: Grip your upper lid between thumb and index fingers and gently squeeze. Feel the superior tarsal plate pop between your fingers? Now repeat with the lower lid and realize that the inferior tarsal plate is much smaller than the superior version.

Figure0077B tarsus KLS edited

photo D

Eyelids are well equipped with sebaceous glands to keep the skin supple and sweat glands to cool the skin and eliminate wastes (Anatomy Lesson #5). But, the inner surfaces of superior and inferior tarsi house unique tarsal (meibomian) glands, specialized glands that release meibum, an oily substance that seals the eyelids when closed and also traps the tear film so it won’t spill over the eyelids (Photo E).

Try this: Look in a mirror and gently pull down your lower eyelid to evert and expose the inner surface (the upper lid is harder to evert). Locate the pale yellow lines arranged perpendicular to the lid margin – these are your tarsal glands!

Figure0077A KLS edited

photo E

Each set of eyelids (Anatomy Lesson #13) is moved by three muscles: orbicularis oculi, levator palpebrae superioris and superior tarsal muscle of Müeller.

Orbicularis oculi muscle (OO) has two parts: an orbital part consists of large muscle loops that overlie bones of the eye socket (Photo F – labelled O); a palpebral part is confined to upper and lower eyelids (Photo F – labelled P). Both orbital and palpebral parts attach to the medial palpebral ligament, a tough band of connective tissue at the medial canthus of each eye (Photo F – red arrow).

photo-F-edited

photo F

The orbital part of OO is under voluntary control meaning we can contract the muscle at will; this action squeezes the flesh surrounding the eyelids.

Jamie presents an agonizing example from Starz episode 116, To Ransom a Man’s Soul: his eyelids are slightly open but the skin around them is puckered because the orbital part of OO is contracted. He has confused his beloved Claire with the awful yuk-man! Pax, Jamie, Claire has ye in her healing hands!

ep 116 Jamie Orbicularis oculi KLS edited

The palpebral part of OO contracts voluntarily to close the eyelids in a conscious blink. Volition is especially evident when we wink – voluntarily contracting the palpebral part of one eyelid.

Do you know how often we blink? Although we can voluntarily contract the palpebral part of OO, it is routinely under unconscious control meaning the brain signals the muscles to contract about 15 times every waking minute. This automated blinking cleanses, renews and redistributes the tear film. Also, if an object flies toward the eyeball, the palpebral part reflexively contracts and closes the lid to protect the cornea. This unconscious response relieves our conscious brain of instructing the palpebral muscles to contract every four seconds while we are awake (see the gif below in slow-mo).

Try this: Open your eyelids. Now contract the flesh around the lids, an action accomplished by the orbital part of OO. Now, relax the flesh around the eyelids and then deliberately blink both eyes or wink one; contraction of the palpebral part of OO causes this action. Next, close the lids of one eye and place a fingertip in the medial canthus. Move the finger gently up and down. Feel the tough ridge of tissue? This is the medial palpebral ligament which provides an attachment site for OO.

220px-Eye_opening_and_closing

The second set of eyelid muscles is levator palpebrae superioris (LPS). Each of these strap-like muscles originates deep in the eye socket and passes forward to insert on the superior tarsal plate of the same side (Photo G). LPS is under voluntary control; its contraction lifts the upper eyelid so light can enter the eyeball. Lacking comparable muscles, the lower eyelids glide open by gravity.

Finally, the third muscle acting on each eyelid is the superior tarsal muscle of Müeller; this small muscle spans from the underbelly of LPS to the superior tarsus (Photo G). Made of a different type of muscle (the body has three types – the rule of three in anatomy!), it can never be moved voluntarily and thus is always under autonomic control. Surprise, shock, pain, loud noises or scary events cause the superior tarsal muscle to contract swiftly and suddenly and the eyelids fly open. This is considered a survival mechanism allowing more light to enter the eyeball so we can quickly identify potential threats.

Figure0077B eyelid muscles KLS edited

photo G

Do we see Müeller’s muscle at work in Starz episodes? Oh, aye. Here are three good examples!

SURPRISE! Across a time barrier of two centuries, Jamie hears Frank shout “my wife is NOT with another man!” Sorry Frank, but she is! Naw… Jamie’s upper eyelids fly open because Hugh Munro’s arrow interrupted some serious hand sex (Starz episode 108, Both Sides Now). Bad timing Hugh – no more gaberlunzies for you!

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SHOCK! Jamie’s upper lids flash open; he is shocked, shocked I say, as he kens that bears aren’t the only creatures that poop in the woods! Wee Willie says he was busy taking a piss (yeah, right) when the red coats captured Claire. She was thrashing about and she’s gonna get thrashed again after Jamie gets her (Starz episode 109, The Reckoning)!

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PAIN! Müeller’s muscle quickly activates as Claire silently embroiders her initials into her handsome hubby’s side. Jamie, she warned ye to stay away from that damned double-dealing Duke! Och, aren’t nurses supposed to be gentle (Starz episode 110, By the Pricking of My Thumbs)?

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Next, let’s view some fun facts about eyelashes. Also known as cilia, eyelashes are short, thick hairs that grow in double or triple rows along the rims of our eyelids (Photo H). Eyelashes naturally curl: upper lashes curve upward and lower lashes curve downward; this design keeps the hairs from interlacing when the lids close. Also, please don’t pull out eyelashes; lashes take 7-8 weeks to regrow but constant pulling can lead to permanent loss. Natural eyelash color may differ from head hair although dark-haired individuals tend to have darker eyelashes than light-haired folks. Eyelashes help capture debris headed for the eyeball surface. Similar to cat whiskers, they are sensitive to touch and provide warning if an object approaches the eyeball so the lids can reflexively close.

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photo H

Many cultures consider long eyelashes a mark of beauty although there is one (Hazda of Tanzania) wherein women trim their eyelashes! Eyelash length is enhanced with mascara, extensions or false eyelashes although enhancing is nothing new. As far back as the Bronze Age kohl was used as eyeliner and lash enhancer and remains the eye cosmetic of choice in some parts of the world. In the west, mascara, eyeliner, eyeshadow, eye putty and tints are used to color the lashes or their bases (Photo I). Also, a mess of tools are used to alter eyelashes such as curlers, applicators and shields. Eyelash transplants are available although it uses head hair so if you go that route,  plan on regular haircuts! Finally, there is also a glaucoma-treatment drug with a side effect of eyelash growth. Whew!

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Photo I

And as if this isn’t enough fussing with our lashes, eyelash jewelry is now in vogue (Photo J)!

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Photo J

Eyelashes are fraught with many problems: infection with parasitic crab lice; ingrown lashes; loss of lashes; abnormal grown of lashes on other parts of the eyelid; itching, redness and flakiness; and styes/stys. And, did you know that 98% of humans harbor a harmless commensal mite (Demodex folliculorum) in the follicles of our eyelashes and eyebrows? In the US, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI – PubMed/NIH) posts numerous concerns about dreadful reactions to glues used in eyelash extensions and other cosmetic eye issues. Wherever you live, please get informed before enhancing the eye or its accessory parts with anything new or weird.

Clinical Correlation: Two major types of sores plague the eyelashes. One type is the stye/sty, the blockage of a sweat gland at the base of the eyelashes that produces a hordeolum, a painful, red, swollen bump (Photo K). A chalazion develops if a tarsal gland becomes blocked. Initially both types of sores are red, swollen and painful. However, over time, the chalazion becomes hard and non-tender whereas the sty/hordeolum continues to sting like a skelping!

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Photo K

Let’s finish this lesson with Outlander images and book quotes about eyelashes and eyelids. Want to see a lovely lassie with long lush lashes? Yep, its wee Jenny staring into shark eyes after BJR sticks his bloodied finger into her mouth (Starz episode 112, Lallybroch). Jamie says his sis has great eyelashes (Outlander book):

—she’s got blue eyes, like mine, but prettier, wi’ black lashes all around.

Maybe so; maybe faux? They look real to me!

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Shortly after their marriage, Claire muses that Jamie has unusual eyelashes (Outlander book).

… His lashes were long… Oddly colored, though; dark auburn at the tips, they were very light, almost blond at the roots.

Claire gits up close and personal as she gazes at Jamie’s long, thick ginger lashes (Starz episode 107, The Wedding). She just interrupted his kiss and he can still smile? What a lad!

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Of course, Outlander book readers ken that our Hero Jamie canna wink (urging non-readers to get with the remedial reading program. Wink, wink!):

He blinked at me like a large red owl—some congenital tic made him incapable of closing one eye in a wink—and I laughed.

Now, Jamie’s not quite blinking like a big old red owl in the image below but the palpebral parts of OO are contracted (Starz episode 107, The Wedding). Seems he is totally bummed because he thinks that Claire didna like IT! What the hey is IT? Ha ha! Seems Murtagh, Rupert and Ned gave Jamie a load of shite about women: they told him women didna like IT! But, they were dead wrong about not-a-wet-nurse Claire. She does like IT!

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Even cray-cray LegHaire, that lying little lass, contracts the palpebral part of OO as she lowers her upper lids. She is sooo sad for her puir Jamie – sob – trapped in a loveless marriage with a cold English bitch (Starz, episode 110, By the Pricking of My Thumbs)! Her lad must get swine drunk before he can stand to plow Claire’s field. SMACK! Seems LungHaire’s cheek just received a bit ‘o Claire’s “healing touch.” Oh, and she’s dead wrong about Mistress Claire; she does like IT! Shouting now!

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Murtagh’s Morning Mistake: he interrupts Jamie’s breakfast (Starz episode 110, By the Pricking of My Thumbs). Snort! Godfather, your eyelids are open now (levator palpebrae superioris is contracted) and ye look a wee bit sheepish. That’s right…baaaad timing! Baaaa!

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Here’s proof of Murtagh’s uh, oh (Starz episode 110, By the Pricking of My Thumbs): with both eyelids closed (palpebral parts of OO contracted and covering her corneas), Claire is basking in the afterglow of “the gift that keeps on giving” – Ira’s words, not mine. Yep, she likes IT!

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So students, Outlander proves that the eyes have it: lashes, lids and brows working together for the greater good!

All together now:

Sing me a song of gal who’s not gone,

Say could that lass be Claire?

Some are dead wrong as she loves her man strong,

Challenge her will if ye dare!

Jamie’s her man,

She belongs to his clan,

She’s part of his blood and bone!

Her eyes are for him; she’ll risk life and limb

‘till their life on earth shall be done!

Oh, sing me a song…

 

A deeply grateful,

Outlander Anatomist

 

photo creds: Netter’s Atlas of Human Anatomy, 4th ed. (Photos D, E, G); Clinically Oriented Anatomy, 5th ed. (image of orbicularis oculi); Starz; www.consumerreports.org (image of eyelash jewelry); www.giffy.com (blinking eyes); www.quotesgram.com (Panda bears); www.rakis.com.au (image of eyebrows); www.web.md.com (image of stye); www.en.wikipedia.org (images of man’s eyebrow; sty; eyelashes; gif of blink)