well this is a tricky question retinal tissue.... .... i fink its the tissue dat keeps da crap in ur anus.... ... dat or its a rare species of a mouse chicken
The function of central retinal artery is that it does absoulutely nothing.....jk.......the artery helps the eye with its central visionn by the fovea and optic nerve n disk...!to be continued..........
well this is a tricky question retinal tissue.... .... i fink its the tissue dat keeps da crap in ur anus.... ... dat or its a rare species of a mouse chicken
According to a study performed and published by the NCBI, saturated fats are essential to retinal growth. Unsaturated fats do not have enough fat to support proper brain and retinal function in infants.
Retinal veins are larger than retinal arteries. Retinal veins are between 2/3 to 3/4 times larger than the arteries of the retina. Retinal vein are also darker red then the arteries.
retinal breaks or detachments; retinal ischemia (retinal tissue that lacks oxygen); neovascularization (proliferation of blood vessels in the retina); Coats' disease
tumor suppresser gene which codes for a protein that regulates E2F protein which is a cell cycle controller
Retinal vein occlusion refers to the closure of the central retinal vein that drains the retina or to that of one of its branches.
Retinal
Multiple retinal hemorrhages-- Bleeding in the back of the eye.
Retinal artery occlusion refers to the closure of the central retinal artery and usually results in complete loss of vision in one eye.
Blood flow in the human eye is primarily provided by the central retinal artery, which branches from the ophthalmic artery. This artery supplies oxygen and nutrients to the inner layers of the retina, while the choroidal circulation, supplied by the ciliary arteries, nourishes the outer layers of the retina and the retinal pigment epithelium. Venous blood is drained through the central retinal vein, which exits the eye alongside the central retinal artery. This vascular system is crucial for maintaining the health and function of the eye.
The retinal pigment epithelium is the pigmented layer of the eye that is just outside of the neurosensory retina. The RPE shields from excess incoming light, supplies omega-3 fatty acids and glucose and nourishes retinal visual cells.