The Zonula, Lens, and Circumlental Space in the Normal Iridectomized Rhesus Monkey Eye
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. Croft et al.
47: 1087
Supplementary Material
Mary Ann Croft, Adrian Glasser, Gregg Heatley, Jared McDonald, Timothy Ebbert, Nivedita V. Nadkarni, and Paul L. Kaufman
Files in this Data Supplement:
- Supplementary Figure S1 -
456 KB (PDF)
- Supplementary Table S1 -
44.9 KB (PDF)
- Movie 1
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80.7 MB (.mov)
Goniovideography images showing the nasal (left panel) and temporal (right panel) quadrant of a 16.5-year-old rhesus monkey eye in the unaccommodated state and during 0.80 mA of central stimulation. The numbers represent the stimulus current in milliamperes (mA). The eye accommodated to a maximum of 9.25 diopters. The lens moved downward within the eye during stimulation. Note that the circumlental space in both quadrants in the unaccommodated state is similar superiorly and inferiorly. In the accommodated state the CLS is smaller inferiorly than superiorly. Also note that the zonula in the accommodated state is oriented in a downward direction, more clearly visualized in the temporal quadrant.
- Movie 2
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82.4 MB (.mov)
Goniovideography images showing the nasal (left panel) and temporal (right panel) quadrants of a 14 year old rhesus monkey eye in the unaccommodated state and during maximal, and supramaximal stimulation. The zonular fibers appear taut in the unaccommodated eye. The zonular fibers in the accommodated state were oriented in a downward direction (left panel). The temporal quadrant had an imperfection on the lens surface (arrow) which continued to move downward by ~0.2 mm after the lens accommodative movement had reached its plateau (i.e., after the lens equator had stopped moving centripetally).