Medicine:Anterior chamber angle

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Short description: Part of eye
Anterior chamber angle
Gray883.png
The upper half of a sagittal section through the front of the eyeball (anterior chamber angle is labeled at center left)
SD OCT - Anterior Chamber Angle Cross-Section (with viewfinder).png
Anterior chamber angle cross-section imaged by an SD-OCT.
Anatomical terminology

The anterior chamber angle is a part of the eye located between the cornea and iris which contains the trabecular meshwork. The size of this angle is an important determinant of the rate aqueous humour flows out of the eye, and thus, the intraocular pressure. The anterior chamber angle is the structure which determines the anterior chamber depth. An extremely narrow anterior chamber angle is a feature of angle closure glaucoma.[1][2]

Additional images

References

  1. Snell, Richard S.; Lemp, Michael A. (April 9, 2013). Clinical Anatomy of the Eye. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118691007. https://books.google.com/books?id=9KXRCwAAQBAJ&q=angle. 
  2. Bron, A.; Tripathi, R.; Tripathi, B. (September 4, 1998). Wolff's Anatomy of the Eye and Orbit, 8Ed. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780412410109. https://books.google.com/books?id=4n2MQgAACAAJ&q=wolff+anatomy.