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Inferior Oblique Muscle websightmd.com | AOJ 48: 131-135 "Unilateral Inferior Oblique Weakening for the... aoj.org |
The Obliquus oculi inferior (inferior oblique) is a thin, narrow muscle, placed near the anterior margin of the floor of the orbit.
[edit] ActionIts actions are lateral rotation, elevation and abduction of the eye. Primary action is extorsion; secondary action is elevation; tertiary action is abduction (i.e. it extorts the eye and moves it upward and outward). The field of maximal inferior oblique elevation is in the adducted position. [edit] PathIt arises from the orbital surface of the maxilla, lateral to the lacrimal groove. Passing lateralward, backward, and upward, between the inferior rectus and the floor of the orbit, the inferior oblique inserts onto the scleral surface between the inferior rectus and lateral rectus. The origin of the inferior oblique muscle is not on the common tendonous ring (annulus of Zinn). [edit] InnervationThe inferior oblique is innervated by the inferior division of the oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve III). [edit] Clinical significanceWhile commonly affected by palsies of the inferior division of the oculomotor nerve, isolated palsies of the inferior oblique (without affecting other functions of the oculomotor nerve) are quite rare. "Overaction" of the inferior oblique muscle is a commonly observed component of childhood strabismus, particularly infantile esotropia and exotropia. Because true hyperinnervation is not usually present, this phenomenon is better termed "elevation in adduction".[1] Surgical procedures of the inferior oblique include: loosening (recession), myectomy, marginal myotomy, and denervation and extirpation. [edit] Additional imagesnote: the description of these images seems to be misplaced (for contributing author to confirm)
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[edit] ReferencesThis article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained within it may be outdated.
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