Auditory Physiology
Auditory Physiology
1. Human Hearing Ability
- The human ear can hear sounds in the frequency range of 20 – 20,000 Hz.
- The ear is most sensitive to frequencies around 1000 Hz.
- The frequencies of normal conversations fall within the range of 500-2000 Hz or 250-4000 Hz.
- Sound intensity depends on sound pressure.
- The threshold of hearing is 0 dB and the threshold of pain is 120 dB.
2. Structure of the Auditory System
- The auditory system comprises:
- Outer ear: Pinna, external auditory canal.
- Middle ear: Tympanic cavity, Eustachian tube.
- Inner ear: Bony labyrinth, membranous labyrinth, inner ear fluid.
- Brain: Central auditory processing area.
- Boundaries:
- Between the outer and middle ear is the tympanic membrane (malleus attached to it).
- Between the inner and middle ear are the round window and oval window (stapes attached to it).
3. Functions of the Outer Ear
- Main function: Receiving and resonating sound.
- Pinna:
- Collects sound.
- Directs sound.
- Amplifies sound (increases by 5-6 dB).
- External auditory canal:
- Conducts sound.
- Increases sound frequency (length 2.5 cm, S-shaped).
- Warms air before it reaches the eardrum.
- Amplifies sound (increases by ~15 dB) at frequencies of 1500-7000 Hz.
- Hair-bearing skin epithelium: Secretes sebum, keeps the ear warm and softens the skin.
- Cerumen (earwax): Epithelium (hydrophobic, water-repellent) secreted in the outer 1/3 of the external auditory canal, with functions:
- Prevents dust, sand, and bacteria.
- Has a taste => repels insects.
- Moisturizes and lubricates the eardrum surface.
- pH=6.1 (acid) => Resistant to bacteria, viruses, and fungi.
- Cleans the external auditory canal.
- Earwax plug: Cerumen impacted and pushed inward => forming an earwax plug.
4. Functions of the Middle Ear
- The middle ear is an air-filled cavity located in the temporal bone.
- Tympanic membrane: Transforms sound waves into mechanical vibrations.
- Sound transmission from air to cochlear fluid: Loss of ~30 dB due to impedance difference (air has lower impedance than cochlear fluid).
- The ear can recover the ~30 dB lost through:
- Area difference of the membrane: The tympanic membrane area is larger than the oval window area => focusing force from the eardrum to the oval window, recovering 25 dB.
- Lever effect: The action of the ossicular chain following the lever principle, recovering 2-3 dB.
- Total recovery: Close to 30 dB.
- Phase difference: Sound travels to the oval window first, and then travels back to the round window later.
- Mechanism to protect the ear from loud sounds:
- Stapedius muscle: Pulls the stapes out.
- Tensor tympani muscle: Presses the stapes in.
- Both muscles contracting will immobilize the ossicular chain => protecting the ear from loud sounds (high frequencies).
- Tympanic membrane perforation: Loss of phase difference.
- Disarticulation of the ossicular chain: Loss of lever effect.
- Tympanic membrane perforation + disarticulation of the ossicular chain: Loss of 40-45 dB.
- Eustachian tube: Regulates air pressure, protects and drains.
5. Functions of the Inner Ear
- The inner ear is located in the middle 1/3 of the petrous bone.
- The inner ear consists of:
- Bony labyrinth: Contains perilymph fluid.
- Membranous labyrinth: Contains endolymph fluid.
- Organ of Corti:
- Has 16,000 hair cells (30-100 stereocilia).
- Above: Stereocilia contact the tectorial membrane.
- Below: The base of the hair cells contacts the first-order sensory neuron fibers (bodies in the spiral ganglion).
- Consists of outer hair cells and inner hair cells: Separated by the tunnel of Corti.
- Outer hair cells: Have 3 rows (13,500 cells), have cilia that contact the tectorial membrane, amplify small sounds, classify frequencies.
- Inner hair cells: Have 1 row (3500 cells), do not have cilia in direct contact with the tectorial membrane, synapse with the centripetal auditory nerve fibers.
- Where the neuro-electrical signal is received: Where it synapses with the centripetal auditory nerve fibers.
- Tonotopy theory: Differences in sound frequency are related to the width and stiffness of the basilar membrane, “standing wave” ripple.
- High-frequency sounds: Short wavelengths, vibrate near the base of the cochlea, stiff and narrow basilar membrane.
- Low-frequency sounds: Long wavelengths, vibrate near the apex of the cochlea, flexible and wide basilar membrane.
- Receptor potential: Generated by hair cells in the basilar membrane vibrating, converting mechanical stimulation into electrical signals.
- Pressure changes in the cochlea:
- Movement of hair cells (leaning against the tectorial membrane).
- Stereocilia bend => generating receptor potential.
- Generating auditory nerve current => connecting to the auditory nerve fibers.
6. Hearing Impairment
- Cochlear implant: Indicated in cases of hearing impairment due to hair cell destruction.
- Mechanism of action: The device converts mechanical stimulation into electrical signals => transmitted to the VIIIth cranial nerve => to the brain.
- Types of hearing loss:
- Sensory neural deafness: Damage to the cochlea or auditory nerve.
- Conductive deafness: Damage to the outer ear or middle ear.
- Mixed deafness: Both.
- Neurological hearing loss: Damage to the VIIIth cranial nerve (often hair cells).
- Causes: Noise, poisoning (antibiotics, anticancer drugs).
- Conductive hearing loss: Vibrations do not reach the hair cells (disruption of the conduction mechanism).
- Middle ear pathology: Acute otitis media, middle ear sclerosis.
- Presbycusis: Gradual degeneration of hair cells in the Organ of Corti.
7. Tinnitus
- Tinnitus is common in the elderly.
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