1 / 26

ANATOMY OF THE EAR

ANATOMY OF THE EAR. Pinna. External Auditory Meatus. External Ear Canal. Tympanic Membrane. Middle Ear Walls. Middle Ear Function. Ossicles. Middle Ear Muscles. Energy Changes. Outer, Middle and Inner Ear. Vestibular Mechanism. Cochlea. Cochlea.

tirzah
Télécharger la présentation

ANATOMY OF THE EAR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ANATOMY OF THE EAR

  2. Pinna

  3. External Auditory Meatus

  4. External Ear Canal

  5. Tympanic Membrane

  6. Middle Ear Walls

  7. Middle Ear Function

  8. Ossicles

  9. Middle Ear Muscles

  10. Energy Changes

  11. Outer, Middle and Inner Ear

  12. Vestibular Mechanism

  13. Cochlea

  14. Cochlea • scala tympani—starts at round window and contains perilymph • scala vestibuli—starts at the oval window and also contains perilymph • helicotrema—found at the apex of the cochlea where the perilymph from the scala tympani and the scala vestibuli meet. • scala media (cochlear duct)—closed at base and at the helicotrema end. This duct contains endolymph which is the same fluid contained within the saccule, utricle, and semicircular canals.

  15. Cochlea

  16. Coil of Cochlea

  17. Scala Media

  18. Cochlea (continued) • Ductus reuniens—connects the vestibular areas to the auditory mechanism and allows the endolymph to circulate between these two areas. • Basilar membrane—separates scala tympani from scala media • Reisner’s membrane—separates scala vestibuli from scala media

  19. Organ of Corti • Organ of Corti—end organ of hearing. Found in the scala media • Rods of Corti—form the tunnel of Corti. On each side of the rods are found hairs arranged in an orderly fashion. One row of inner hair cells (3,000) and three rows of outer hair cells (12,000—15,000). • Tectorial membrane—hair cells are imbedded in this jelly-like membrane after they pass through the reticular lamina. • Hensen cells—supportive to the hair cells • Stria vascularis—produces endolymph and is responsible for getting oxygen and blood to the Organ of Corti. Found on the lateral wall of the cochlear duct.

  20. Organ of Corti

  21. Cochlea Unrolled

  22. Frequency Specific

  23. Cochlea Cochlea is frequency specific - basal end is responsible for the high frequencies and apical end controls low frequencies.

  24. Auditory Nerve • Internal auditory Meatus (IAM) - nerve fibers pass from the modiolus through the IAM to the base of the brain. • VIII Nerve is comprised of 30,000 nerve fibers from the cochlea + 20,000 from the vestibular and travel through the IAM to the brain stem.

  25. Auditory Pathways

  26. Auditory Pathways • Cochlea hair cells • Auditory nerve fibers • Cochlear nucleus • Trapezoid body • Superior olivary complex • Lateral lemniscus • Inferior coliculus • Medial geniculate body • Auditory cortex

More Related