Mechanical Coupling of Extraocular Muscles, Optic Nerve Tension, and Orbital Fat as a Driver of Directional Posterior Ocular Deformation

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Posterior ocular deformation is central to myopia-associated structural change, yet a unified mechanical explanation for directionally biased deformation remains lacking. We propose a biomechanical hypothesis in which extraocular muscles, optic nerve tension, and orbital fat act as a mechanically coupled system that generates directional loading on the posterior globe. In this framework, the medial rectus contributes posteriorly directed force, the superior oblique contributes a rotational component, optic nerve tension transmits and concentrates posterior traction, and orbital fat provides a viscoelastic constraint that redistributes load within the orbit. Their combined action is proposed to bias posterior ocular deformation in specific directions, thereby providing a common mechanical basis for optic disc tilt, optic disc torsion, and related posterior pole shape changes. This article develops the mechanical logic of the model, distinguishes it from scalar growth-centered accounts of myopia progression, and outlines testable predictions for imaging, gaze-dependent biomechanics, and clinical intervention. The model is intended as a hypothesis-generating framework for directional ocular biomechanics rather than as a completed experimental account.

Article activity feed