HUF 2-53 Physiology of hearing Flashcards

1
Q

Sound and measurement of its intensity

A

Sound:

  • Oscillation of molecules in an elastic medium
  • Propagates as waves
  • Air: larger air pressure variation = more energy

SPL = 2log(10) Px/P0
Px: abs. sound pressure
P0: ref. pressure (2x10^-5 Pas)

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2
Q

Why use decibel?

A
  • Log scale compresses very large of abs sound intensity of ear
  • 6 dB ↑ = doubling in Pas
  • 20 dB ↑ = 10 times ↑ in Pas
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3
Q

Sensitivity of ear to different freq.

A
  1. Loudness: intensity
  2. Pitch: freq.
  • Freq. also affects audibility of tone (curves of equal loudness)
  • Most sensitive to freq. from 10^2 to 10^3 Hz (range of normal speech)
  • Hearing impairment in this range
    => Affects verbal communication
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4
Q

Structure of auditory apparatus

A
  1. Outer ear
    - Convoluted pinna, auricle, ext. auditory meatus
    - Complex acoustic cavity efficiently transmit sound pressure at tympanic membrane (~2-5 kHz)
    - Sound collection and localisation
  2. Middle ear
    - Tympanic membrane, malleus, incus, stapes
    - Sound amplification (P1A1 = P2A2)
    - Impedance matching: energy from air-borne sound converted to fluid-borne sound in inner ear
  3. Inner ear
    - Cochlea: mechanoelectric transduction of sound; preliminary analysis of sound waves (cochlear n.)
    - Vestibule: balance
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5
Q

Structure of inner ear

A

Scala vestibuli -> Scala tympani

  • Communicate at helicotrema
  • Filled with perilymph (low K+, high Na+)

Scala media
- Filled with endolymph (high K+)
- Mechanosensitive hair cells
=> Organ of Corti (lies on basilar membrane)

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6
Q

Transmission of sound into inner ear

A

Stapes vibrates
=> Pressure changes within cochlea
=> Pressure waves along scala vestibula;
Travelling wave in highly flexible basilar membrane (non-uniform)

  • Stiffness of basilar membrane decreases from base to apex
    ∴ Diff. freq. => diff. points of basilar membrane
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7
Q

Transduction of sound by Organ of Corti

A
  • 1 row of inner hair cells; 3 rows of outer hair cells (cochlear n.)
  • Tectorial membrane on top is in contact with stereocilia of hair cells
  • Sound through inner air
    => Relative movement of basilar and tectorial membrane
    => Stretch stereocilia
  • Stereocilia bend toward longest one
    => Mechano-sensitive ion channels open
    => Sub-microscopic links (tip links) provide translational mechanical forces among stereocilia
    => K+ influx
    => Depolarisation
    => Ca2+ influx
    => GLU exciting aff. n.; other ions maintain membrane excitability
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8
Q

Role of outer hair cells - cochlear amplifies

A

Tiny motors on outer hair cells

  • Right membrane voltage changes
    => Outer hair cells contracts / relaxes
    => Mechanically amplify movement of basilar membrane
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9
Q

Ascending pathways of auditory signal

A
Cochlear nu.
=> Dorsal acoustic stria;
Intermediate acoustic stria;
Trapezoid body (-> superior olivary nu.)
=> Nu. of lateral lemniscus
=> Inferior colliculus
=> Medial geniculate nu.
=> 1° auditory cortex
  • SLIM
  • Bilateral projection
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10
Q

Cues for localising source of sound

A
  • Sound intensity diff. in 2 ears
  • Pattern of sound diffraction by outer ear
  • Diff. of time of arrival of same sound at 2 ears

Neurons which receive signals from both ears detect simultaneous arrival of signals from L. and R. ears
=> Localisation

  • Sup. olivary nu.
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11
Q

Coding of sound freq.

A
Cochlea
=> Chchlear nu.
=> Other brainstem nu.
=> 1° auditory cortex
=> Tonotopic map
  • 1° auditory cortex: first stage of cortical processing of sound
  • Info relayed to higher auditory areas for further processing
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12
Q

2 streams of sound processing

A
  • Tonotopic 1° auditory cortex (core)
    => 2° auditory cortex (Belt and Parabelt regions)
    => Analyse complex sounds:
    Anterior stream: ‘what’ is heard
    Poterior stream: ‘where’ the sound comes from; speech
    => Prefrontal cortex
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13
Q

Hearing impairment

A

Congenital / acquired

  1. Conduction deafness: loss / inefficient sound transmission in tympanic membrane-ear bone apparatus
    e. g. middle ear infection; otosclerosis; damage of tympanum
  2. Perception deafness
    - damage in inner ear or higher centres
    e. g. noise-induced hair cell loss; brain tumour
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14
Q

Standard audiometric test

A

Audiometry: test and document one’s hearing ability
=> Differentiate conduction and perception deafness

Air conduction test vs. bone conduction test
e.g. Weber’s test, Rinne’s test

Audiogram

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