Occipital pole
Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
At the time the article was created Daniel Loh had no recorded disclosures.
View Daniel Loh's current disclosuresAt the time the article was last revised Craig Hacking had the following disclosures:
- Philips Australia, Paid speaker at Philips Spectral CT events (ongoing)
These were assessed during peer review and were determined to not be relevant to the changes that were made.
View Craig Hacking's current disclosures- Occipital poles
The occipital pole is an anatomical landmark that corresponds to the posterior portion of the occipital lobe. It is formed by the convergence of the superior and inferior occipital gyri in the majority of individuals; the middle occipital gyrus also contributes when it is present 1.
Gross anatomy
It contains the part of the primary visual cortex (Brodmann area 17) representing the macular (central) vision. This posterior segment accounts for the majority of the primary visual cortex because of the disproportionate macular representation within the cortex 2; axons coming from the fovea and a 1 mm 3 area around it (representing the central 10 degrees and corresponding to ~2% of the total visual field) innervate ~60% of the primary visual cortex 2.
Blood supply
The vasculature of the occipital pole is unique in that it receives a dual blood supply, with anastomoses from the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) as well as the deep branch of the middle cerebral artery 4.
Related pathology
Lesions of the occipital pole result in a contralateral homonymous defect of macular vision (HMV) 4.
The dual blood supply explains the phenomenon of a macula-sparing hemianopia that occurs with occlusion of the PCA in which the anterior portions of the primary visual cortex representing peripheral vision are affected while the occipital pole is spared. However, HMV is not as uncommon in PCA infarct as may be expected; a retrospective case-series of 54 patients with PCA infarcts found that of the 43 with visual field defects, 6 had HMV while 4 had macula-sparing hemianopia 4.
References
- 1. Alves RV, Ribas GC, Párraga RG et-al. The occipital lobe convexity sulci and gyri. J. Neurosurg. 2012;116 (5): 1014-23. doi:10.3171/2012.1.JNS11978 - Pubmed citation
- 2. Rajakumar R. Barr's The Human Nervous System: An Anatomical Viewpoint. LWW. ISBN:145117327X. Read it at Google Books - Find it at Amazon
- 3. De Moraes CG. Anatomy of the visual pathways. J. Glaucoma. 2013;22 Suppl 5: S2-7. doi:10.1097/IJG.0b013e3182934978 - Pubmed citation
- 4. Isa K, Miyashita K, Yanagimoto S et-al. Homonymous defect of macular vision in ischemic stroke. Eur. Neurol. 2001;46 (3): 126-30. Pubmed citation
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