Hearing Disorders Flashcards
Here you can see the anatomy of the normal ear which is traditionally divided into three sections, the outer, middle and inner ear.
How is sound transduced through the ear?
Sound waves propagate in the air, enter the external auditory canal and bounce off the tympanic membrane like a trampoline. Set into motion, the tympanic membrane moves the malleus, incus and stapes. Movement of the stapes footplate changes the pressure in the fluid-filled inner ear and that triggers a traveling wave in the basilar membrane of the cochlea.
Hearing can also occur by bone conduction when the sounding source, such as a vibrating tuning fork, is in contact with the bones of the skull resulting in their vibration. When the sound is transmitted through air or bone, the traveling wave in the basilar membrane moves from the base to the apex of the cochlea.
Inside the cochlea, hair cells with stereocilia are found in the organ of Corti, which rests on the basilar membrane. These hair cells are in contact with the tectorial membrane and are deformed by the traveling wave of sound.
High frequency tones maximally displace the basilar membrane near the base of the cochlea. As the frequency of the sound decreases, the point of maximal membrane displacement moves toward the cochlear apex. The distortion of the stereocilia on the hair cells causes depolarization of the cell and that results in increased electrical activity along the auditory nerve.
How big a problem is hearing loss?
According to World Health Organization estimates, almost 300 million people worldwide have moderate to profound hearing loss affecting both ears. Hearing loss affects all ages and presents special challenges in childhood. The problem will only get bigger as the population grows older.
If the transmission of sound through the air fails, hearing can still occur through bone conduction. This is called conductive hearing loss and its causes are multiple.
You can give yourself a conductive hearing loss by sticking your finger in your ear to block out sound. Try speaking and you will note that your voice lateralizes to the side of the occluded ear.
There are many causes of conductive hearing loss and those listed here are a small sample. It is remarkable how many patients are surprised by the improved hearing when ear wax is cleaned out of their ear canals. In children a peanut or other foreign object can lodge in the external auditory canal. Infection, inflammation and perforation of the tympanic membrane all cause loss of hearing conducted by air. In otosclerosis bony overgrowth of the stapes, at its point of attachment to the cochlea, causes the ossicles to stiffen and fail to transmit sound vibrations from the tympanic membrane.
What is sensorineural hearing loss?
Sensorineural hearing loss arises principally from damage to hair cells in the organ of Corti. This can occur following a very loud noise, viral infection, ototoxic medication, fractures of the temporal bone and Ménière’s disease.
It can be a congenital problem and commonly occurs with advancing age.
What is Presbyacusis?
refers to age-related hearing loss that is gradually progressive and involves mostly high frequency sounds.
More causes of sensorineural hearing loss
Drug induced ototoxicity occurs with aminoglycoside antibiotics such as gentamicin, but can also occur with Lasix, salicylates, quinine and cancer drugs such as cisplatin.
Sensorineural hearing loss occurs with acoustic neuroma and other tumors of the cerebellar pontine angle that compress the auditory nerve.
Theoretically hearing loss can also occur with stroke, demyelination, trauma or any other structural disease affecting the central auditory pathways. However, hearing loss is less often seen with disease of the brain parenchyma because the central auditory pathways cross over at many way-stations along their journey to the medial geniculate nucleus of the thalamus and ultimately to Heschl’s gyrus. This redundancy in neural circuitry helps to protect the individual from gross lateralizing hearing loss which is not the case for other sensory systems such as vision, pain and temperature. Occasionally one does find hearing loss in multiple sclerosis patients with brainstem plaques.
A person can have both conductive and sensorineural hearing loss, which is termed:
mixed hearing loss.
What causes mixed hearing loss?
This is due to pathology that can affect the middle and inner ear simultaneously. The causes include otosclerosis, temporal bone fractures, chronic middle ear infections (otitis media), middle ear tumors (cholesteatoma) and some inner ear malformations.
What is Meniere’s disease?
Ménière’s disease produces vertigo, fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus.
What causes Meniere’s disease?
Decreased resorption of endolymphatic fluid causes fluid build-up or hydrops with high pressure, bowing and subsequent rupture in the membranes separating the endolymph from the perilymph.
The two fluids have very different compositions and their mixture produces a sudden change in vestibular cochlear pressure and in their electrical firing properties.Attacks can last 30 minutes to several hours, until equilibrium is reestablished.
Disease progression with Meniere’s disease
In the early stages, the symptoms remit between attacks and patients may be symptom free for a year or more. With disease progression, the hearing loss persists and gradually worsens. Tinnitus may become continuous.
How in Meniere’s disease tx?
Treatment with a low salt diet and diuretics can be helpful. Vestibular sedatives including anticholinergics, antihistamines and benzodiazepines may be helpful when the patient is stricken with an attack.