Fig. 11—Showing how vitreous seems to be held together by a network of fibres. (Page 41.)
Whichever method for removing the vitreous is followed, the retina will be left rather badly wrinkled and out of place. If the last-mentioned method, which is really the best of the three described, is the one adopted, the retina will be left in an entirely collapsed and folded form. In any case, to straighten out the retina against the choroid, immerse the whole posterior half in water, inside uppermost. The retina will then slowly unfold itself and lie flat against the choroid. With the tweezers remove the whole half from the water; tilting it slowly to empty it of all the water, and, having done so, turn it down upon the table rather forcibly in order to help it drain itself of all the water.
Notice the thinness of the retina, and, also, that the seeming iridescence of the choroid shows through. The optic disc, which is the point of entrance of the optic nerve, and the optic cup are easily recognized, though neither will be seen as large as when viewed in the living eye with an ophthalmoscope. The blood vessels of the retina, as they ramify outward or forward, after their entrance through the optic nerve through which they pass, are also very plainly seen. A closer inspection will show, in the very centre of the “entrance” of the optic nerve, a whitish, pointed vessel, about 1 or 2 mm. long. That is the sloughed-off and atrophied end of the hyaloid artery, which, when the eye was in an embryonic state, ran forward from the central artery of the retina through the hyaloid canal to the posterior surface of the lens. With the forceps pick up the peripheral edge of the retina, and, by pulling gently upward, tear it away from its apparent place of attachment to the “entrance” of the optic nerve. ([Fig. 12].) When this has been done, there will be seen some threads protruding from the optic nerve. Filling the half with water will tend to separate these strands, which are optic-nerve elements.
Fig. 12—Picking up the retina in order to tear it away from the entrance of the optic nerve.
Fig. 13—The lighter area is the field of iridescence of the choroid.
After the removal of the retina, the iridescence of the choroid (tapetum lucidum) ([Fig. 13]) may be examined with a hand lens, or, after its removal, a piece may be cut and placed under a microscope. This iridescence is, of course, not present in the human eye. (“Physiology of the Senses,” McKendrick & Snodgrass, page 101.)