The cornea
is one of three tissue layers which form the wall of the eye. These include:
(1) the sclera and cornea, (2) the uveal tract, and (3) the retina. The
sclera and cornea consist of tough tissues that make up the outer layer
of the eyeball and give it strength as well as protect it. The sclera covers
about 85 percent of the eyeball and the cornea the remaining 15 percent.
The sclera is the white part of the eye and has the
strength
and feel of soft leather. Although the sclera appears to have many blood
vessels on its surface, most of these vessels are part of the conjunctiva.
In contrast, the cornea contains no blood vessels and is relatively dehydrated;
as a result, it is transparent. The cornea lies in front of the colored
part of the eye and resembles the crystal of a wrist watch . The cornea
allows light rays to enter the eyeball.
The lens
lies directly behind the iris and is connected by strong, microscopic fibers
to the ciliary body, which encircles the iris. The lens is a flexible structure
about the size and shape of an aspirin tablet. Like the
cornea,
the lens is transparent because it contains no blood vessels and is relatively
dehydrated. The muscles of the ciliary body make constant adjustments in
the shape of the lens. The adjustments produce a sharp visual image at
all times as the eye shifts focus between nearby and distant objects. Both
the cornea and lens are kept nourished and lubricated by a clear, watery
fluid produced continuously by the ciliary body called aqueous humor. Aqueous
humor fills the area between the lens and cornea. Fluid that has already
nourished both these parts of the eye flows into a drainage system at a
spongy, circular groove where the cornea and the sclera meet. It then travels
through the veins of the eyeball into the veins of the neck.