Graciole bundle

The name "Graciole Bun" comes from the words "gracilis" (gracilius), which means thin and graceful, and the Latin word "oculus" (eyepiece), which translates as "eyeball". In Latin, the Graciole beam sounds like optic radiance or simply “radiance of the eyes.”

The reasons for the appearance of a tuft in the eye can be very different. However, experts share several main sources of vision beams:



Bunch of Graciole.

The grasiole bundle is part of the visual analyzer and is an area at the junction between the macular retina and the peripapillary canal. It is located on the periphery of the retina and is one of the brightest areas of the eye that can be observed in clinical optical coherence tomography (OCT), a specialized laser-based examination method that provides images of the structure of the eye tissues and peripheral blood vessels.

Definition Graciele bundles are only one of five types of areas of optic radiance at the border of the retina. They are located at the posterior pole or ophthalmic centric angle of the retina at the center of the optic nerve head. When graciel tufts appear, a sharp yellow glow is observed. The formation indicates the development of the disease and drooping of the anterior ends of the retinal membranes due to thinning of the retinal pigment. In turn, this can be attributed to the formation of myopia. Normally, visual radiance does not appear. A distinct visibility is formed at the moment the pupil reacts to a light stimulus and at the same time disappears after 5-7 seconds. This