Lecture 3: Vestibular Function Flashcards
Define the vestibular system?
A sensory system in the inner ear (embedded in temporal bone).
Its made up of fluid (endolymph) filled membranous channels or labyrinths
What makes up the vestibular system?
3 semicircular canals
- Swellings at the base called ampulla
- Connnected to Otolith organs (Utricle –> Saccule)
What does the vestibular system detect?
The semi-circular canals detect rotational acceleration
The otolith organs detect linear acceleration
- Utricle = From/back tilt
- Saccule - Vertical Movement
What is contained within the ampulla at the base of each semicircular canal?
An organ called Cristae made up of:
- A gelatinous cupulu within which sit the cilia of sensory hair cells (they then synapse to the vestibulocochlear nerve)
What types of cilia are there?
Each ampulla and otolith organ contains one large kinocilium and many smaller stereocilia
How do semi-circular canals detect rotational acceleration
As you rotate your head the ampulla moves but the intertia of the endolymph keep it stationary at first
This produces drag on the cupula which bends the cilia in the opposite direction to movement, triggering nervous impulses
Why do you feel dizzy, like your moving, when you stop suddenly?
The endolymphs inertia means it continues to move (and stimulate the cilia) after the ampulla stops
How do we tell which direction were moving in?
Cilia distorted towards the kinocilium –> Depolarisation –> Rise in APs
Cilia distorted away from kinocilium –> Hyperpolarisation –> Loss of APs
The cupula are also all in slightly different orientations so they are stimulated by different movements
Where does the brain integrate all the nervous impulses from the vestibular system?
Cerebellum
What do we call the sensory apparatus of the otolith organs?
Maculae
What plane are the maculae of the otolith organs in?
Utricle - Horizontal
Saccule - Verticle
Describe the structure of the maculae?
Cilia (Kinocilium and stereocilia) project into a gelatinous mass called the otolith membrane
Otoliths (CaCO3 crystals) embedded into the membrane
Why do maculae contain otoliths?
Because they are more effected by gravity than endolymph, so do a better job reacting to linear acceleration
How do the maculae detect linear acceleration?
Utricle:
- Tilt the head back causes the ototlith to move with gravity
- Pulls on the otolith membrane and so the cilia, towards the kinocilium
- Depolarisation
- Increased APs
- And the opposite for forward tilt
The saccule does a similar thing for verticle movement
Moving your head causes a change in your centre of gravity, how does the body deal with this?
Vestibular nuclei get input from proprioceptos, neck and eye muscles regarding limb/body position.
Then projections from the vestibular nuclei project to the cerebellum (to handle posture/balance) and to the cerebral cortex via the thalamus (for conscious perception of movement and body position i.e. kinaesthesia)