The Ear: Anatomy & Physiology
EAR CANALS:
external, middle, and inner.
the external ear canal
- Extends through the tympanic portion of the temporal bone, just in front of the mastoid process.
the middle ear canal
the inner ear canal
- Lies within the petrous portion of the temporal bone.
- The semicircular canals, which lie in superior-lateral position and serve vestibular function.
- The cochlea, which is shaped like a snail's shell, and lies in anterior-inferior position and serves auditory function.
- The vestibule, which lies in between the cochlea and semicircular canals — it transmits sound waves from the oval window to the cochlea and show that it contains the otolith organs, which provide vestibular cues.
The cochlea
Integral for the detection of sound.
- 3 Ducts:
- The cochlear duct (scala media).
- Vestibular duct (scala vestibuli) (which is continuous with the vestibule).
- Tympanic duct (scala tympani), which ends in the round window (aka the secondary tympanic membrane).
- Membranes:
- Reissner's membrane separates the vestibular and cochlear ducts.
- The Basilar membrane separates the cochlear and tympanic ducts.
- Fluids:
- The vestibular and tympanic ducts are filled with perilymphatic fluid, which is high in Na+ and low in K+ (like extracellular fluid).
- The cochlear duct is filled with endolymphatic fluid, which is high in K+ and low in Na+ (like intracellular fluid).
Ménière's syndrome (bouts of vertigo, low-frequency hearing loss, and ear fullness ) is thought to be due to pathologically elevated endolymphatic sodium concentration, so it is commonly treated with salt-wasting diuretic medications.
Physiology of Sound Detection
- When a sound wave enters the external ear canal, it vibrates the tympanic membrane.
- The tympanic membrane, then, transmits the wave through the ossicles: the malleus, incus, and stapes, and the stapes strikes the oval window.
- When the oval window vibrates, a fluid wave passes through the vestibule and the vestibular duct.
- The vestibular and tympanic ducts connect at the apex of the cochlea (aka the helicotrema).
- The sound waves passes across the apex of the cochlea into the tympanic duct, through the tympanic duct, and pushes the round window into the air-filled middle ear canal.
In this process, the auditory sensory organ, the organ of Corti, which lies along the basilar membrane, is activated for sound detection.
- High-frequency sounds activate hair cells at the base of the cochlea (near the oval and round windows) whereas low-frequency sounds activate hair cells at the apex of the cochlea.
- The basilar membrane is thinnest at its base and widest at its apex.
The major vestibular components of the ear: the otolith organs and the semicircular canals.
- Within the vestibule, lie the saccule, which detects vertical movement (ie, gravity), and the utricle, which detects horizontal (forward/backward) movement.
- The macula (the neuroepithelial sensory detection region) of the saccule is principally vertically oriented and its attached hair cells are horizontally oriented to detect vertical movement, whereas the macula of the utricle is principally horizontally oriented and its attached hair cells are vertically oriented to detect horizontal movement.
The semicircular canals: horizontal, posterior, and anterior.
- These three semicircular canals lie perpendicular to one another and detect rotational acceleration, which we address in the next tutorial.