Sclera
The sclera (plural: scleras or sclerae) is the fibrous, opaque white, coat of the eye. It functions to protect the intra-ocular contents.
On this page:
Summary
- location: posterior fifth-sixths of the eyeball
- blood supply: ciliary arteries
- innervation: ciliary nerves
- relations: anteriorly continuous with the cornea
Gross anatomy
Outermost coat of the 3-layered globe. Anteriorly continuous with the cornea. Posteriorly perforated by the optic nerve at the lamina cribrosa.
Arterial supply
Anteriorly, the anterior ciliary arteries form a dense episcleral plexus. Posteriorly, supplied by branches of the short and long posterior ciliary arteries.
Lymphatic drainage
The sclera is an alymphatic organ.
Innervation
Anteriorly supplied by the long ciliary nerves. Posteriorly supplied by the short ciliary nerves.
Histology
The sclera may be divided into its three histological layers:
- episclera
- outermost, loose connective tissue layer, connected to the Tenon's capsule
- rich vascular supply from anterior ciliary arteries
- scleral stroma
- dense fibrous tissue intermingled with fine elastic fibers
- irregular arrangement of type I and III collagen responsible for its opacity
- lamina fusca
- innermost layer with melanocytes
- weakly related to the choroid
Radiographic features
Ultrasound and CT are not useful modalities.
Anterior segment ocular coherence tomography (AS-OCT)
- readily used in clinical practice to measure sclera thickness, monitor therapeutic response in scleritis treatment
- quantitative measurements obtained
MRI
- useful in the diagnosis of posterior scleritis and episcleritis
- T1-weighted sequences, sclera appears as the hypointense rim of the globe
History and etymology
Medical Latin, from Greek sklera (menix) "the hard (membrane)," fem. of skleros "hard".
Related pathology
- scleral plaques
- episcleritis/scleritis: inflammation of the sclera
- staphyloma: full or partial thickness sclera defect lined by uvea
Related Radiopaedia articles
Anatomy: Head and neck
- skeleton of the head and neck
-
cranial vault
- scalp (mnemonic)
-
sutures
- calvarial
- facial
- frontozygomatic suture
- frontomaxillary suture
- frontolacrimal suture
- frontonasal suture
- temporozygomatic suture
- zygomaticomaxillary suture
- parietotemporal suture (parietomastoid suture)
- occipitotemporal suture (occipitomastoid suture)
- sphenofrontal suture
- sphenozygomatic suture
- spheno-occipital suture (not a true suture)
- lacrimomaxillary suture
- nasomaxillary suture
- internasal suture
- basal/internal
- skull landmarks
- frontal bone
- temporal bone
- parietal bone
- occipital bone
- skull base (foramina)
-
facial bones
- midline single bones
- paired bilateral bones
- cervical spine
- hyoid bone
- laryngeal cartilages
-
cranial vault
- muscles of the head and neck
- muscles of the tongue (mnemonic)
- muscles of mastication
- muscles of facial expression
- muscles of the middle ear
- orbital muscles
- muscles of the soft palate
- pharyngeal muscles
- suprahyoid muscles
- infrahyoid muscles
- intrinsic muscles of the larynx
- muscles of the neck
- deep cervical fascia
-
deep spaces of the neck
- anterior cervical space
- buccal space
- carotid space
- danger space
- deep cervical fascia
- infratemporal fossa
- masticator space
- parapharyngeal space
- parotid space
- pharyngeal (superficial) mucosal space
- perivertebral space
- posterior cervical space
- pterygopalatine fossa
- retropharyngeal space
- suprasternal space (of Burns)
- visceral space
- surgical triangles of the neck
- orbit
- ear
- paranasal sinuses
- nose
- oral cavity
- pharynx
- larynx
- viscera of the neck
- blood supply of the head and neck
-
arterial supply
-
common carotid artery
- carotid body
- carotid bifurcation
- subclavian artery
- variants
-
common carotid artery
- venous drainage
-
arterial supply
- innervation of the head and neck
-
cranial nerves
- olfactory nerve (CN I)
- optic nerve (CN II)
- oculomotor nerve (CN III)
- trochlear nerve (CN IV)
-
trigeminal nerve (CN V) (mnemonic)
- trigeminal ganglion
- ophthalmic division
- maxillary division
- mandibular division
- abducens nerve (CN VI)
- facial nerve (CN VII)
- vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII)
- glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX)
-
vagus nerve (CN X)
- superior laryngeal nerve
- recurrent laryngeal nerve (inferior laryngeal nerve)
- (spinal) accessory nerve (CN XI)
- hypoglossal nerve (CN XII)
- parasympathetic ganglia of the head and neck
- greater occipital nerve
-
cervical plexus
- muscular branches
- longus capitis
- longus colli
- scalenes
- geniohyoid
- thyrohyoid
-
ansa cervicalis
- omohyoid (superior and inferior bellies separately)
- sternothyroid
- sternohyoid
- phrenic nerve
- contribution to the accessory nerve (CN XI)
- cutaneous branches
- muscular branches
- brachial plexus
- pharyngeal plexus
-
cranial nerves
- lymphatic drainage of the head and neck