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Optic cup (embryology)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Optic cup (embryology)
Transverse section of head of chick embryo of forty-eight hours’ incubation. (Margin of optic cup labeled at upper right.)
Optic cup and choroidal fissure seen from below, from a human embryo of about four weeks. (Edge of optic cup labeled at upper right.)
Details
Carnegie stage13
Days36
PrecursorOptic vesicles
Identifiers
Latincupula optica; caliculus ophthalmicus
TEcup (embryology)_by_E5.14.3.4.2.2.7 E5.14.3.4.2.2.7
Anatomical terminology

During embryonic development of the eye, the outer wall of the bulb of the optic vesicles becomes thickened and invaginated, and the bulb is thus converted into a cup, the optic cup (or ophthalmic cup), consisting of two strata of cells. These two strata are continuous with each other at the cup margin, which ultimately overlaps the front of the lens and reaches as far forward as the future aperture of the pupil.

The optic cup is part of the diencephalon and gives rise to the retina of the eye.

References

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Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 1001 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

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