Publications by authors named "Gordon L Ruskell"

Recent studies have promoted the concept that rectus muscles pass through connective tissue pulleys located near the equator of the eye and act, in effect, as the muscle origins. Orbital muscle fibres (facing bone) terminate in pulleys, permitting adjustment of their position independent of the global fibres responsible for rotating the eye. The structure of pulleys (or muscle sleeves) and the passage taken by their muscle fibre insertions are unclear, and a detailed description is presented here together with a review of the active pulley hypothesis.

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To trace the path taken by the putative postganglionic secretomotor fibres to the lacrimal gland the contents of the orbital and pterygopalatine fossa were removed whole, cut coronally into slabs and embedded in resin. Thin sections were cut at varying intervals to reconstruct the pathway taken. One group of rami orbitales issuing from the pterygopalatine ganglion passed dorsally adjacent to the lateral wall of the orbit, joined the retro-orbital plexus at the apex, and 5-10 rami lacrimales advanced from the plexus to enter the gland.

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Parasympathetic nerves of pterygopalatine ganglion origin are considered to enter the orbit and distribute to the nasal mucosa with the anterior ethmoidal nerve. As their distribution has never been demonstrated the present study was undertaken to seek evidence of their passage and to identify their relationship with the ethmoidal nerves. The soft tissues of the pterygopalatine fossa and orbit from sixteen sides of twelve cadavers were removed in one piece and either dissected or cut coronally into slabs and prepared histologically using montages of thin resin-embedded sections at intervals suitable for nerve path tracing.

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The notion that autonomic nerves from the internal carotid plexus are transmitted to the orbit with the ophthalmic artery through the optic canal has been variously assumed, disregarded, or denied, but never demonstrated. The objective of this study was to examine the contents of the canal, identify any autonomic nerves, and follow their passage within the orbit. The soft tissues of the optic canal, and the apical tissues of the orbit were removed and examined histologically using 10 cadaver preparations.

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