Topic 111 - Inner ear; vestibular appartus and hearing Flashcards

1
Q

Words to include in sound

A
  • Sound
    • Amplitude
    • Wavelength / frequency
  • Speed
  • Sound intensity
    • Decibel unit
    • Ble unit
  • Loudness
    • Phon scale
    • Bel scale
    • Sound pressure
    • Intensity
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2
Q

Words to include in internal ear and hearing

A
  • Oval window
  • Perilymph (Na+)
    • Scala vestibuli
    • Scala tympani
  • Endolymph (K+)
    • Scala media
  • Helicotrema
  • Cochlea
    • Basilar membrane
    • Lamina spiralis ossea
    • Vestibular membrane / Reissner’s membrane
    • Oval vindow
    • Scala media
    • Cochlear duct
    • Scala vestibuli
    • Tectoral membrane
    • Spiral ganglion
    • Organ of corti
    • Modiolus
    • Scala tympani
  • Organ of Corti
    • Receptor system
      • Receptor cells
        • Hair cells
          • Sterocilia
          • Basilar membrane
          • Cochlear duct
          • Modified epithelial cells
        • Pillar cells
        • Cells of Deiters
        • Cells of Claudis
        • Cells of Hensen
        • Conducted by bipolar neurons of spiral ganglion
        • Acustic nerve
          • Axons towards CNS
    • Hearing organ
    • Mechanical vibration
    • Neural signals
    • Scala media
    • Tectoral membrane
    • Excitation

Mechanism of hearing

  • Helicotrema
  • Oval window
  • Stretched basilar membrane
  • Maximum amplitude
  • Molecular level, inner ear:
    • Displacement
      • Mechano-sensitive cation channels
    • Potassium current
      • Depolarization
    • Voltage dependent calcium channels open
      • Calcium influx
    • Calcium sensitive basolateral potassium channels open
      • Potassium efflux
    • Repolarization or hyperpolarization
    • Calcium sequestration
    • Glutamte transmission
    • Oscillation membrane potential
      • Amplification

Auditory pathway

  • Primary auditory cortex (Brodmann’s area 41)
  • Thalamus CGM
  • Ventral colliculus
  • Medial lemniscus
  • Dorsal olivary nucleus
  • Cochlear ganglion
  • Organ of Corti
  • Spiral ganglion
  • Afferent auditory pathway
    • Axons of spiral ganglion
      • Auditory nerve
    • Cochlear nucleus
      • Stellate cells
        • Tonotopically aranged
      • Bushy cells
        • Spatial orientation
    • Olivary nucleus
    • Nucleus of lateral lemniscus
    • Ventral nucleus
    • Medial geniculate nucleus
      • Motro response
    • Primary auditory cortex
      • Tonotopic organized
  • Efferent auditory pathway
    • CGM
    • Lateral colliculus
    • Olivo-cochlear
      • Outer rows of hair cells
        • Tuning their mechano-sensitive sensitivity
    • Colliculi
      • M. stapedius
      • M. tensor typmani
        • Pull malleolus medially
          • Tense tympanic membrane
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3
Q

Words to include in vestibular apparatus

A
  • CNS
  • Spatial position
  • Motion of the head
  • Static and kinetic information
  • Coclear duct
    • Auditory organ connection
    • Endolymph
  • Semicircular canals (3 stk)
    • Physical movement of head
    • Endolymph → ampulla
    • Cupula
    • Mechanical movement → electrical signals
    • Hair cells
      • Kinocilium
      • Cation conductance
      • Depolarization
        • Neurotransmitter release
          • Sensory epithelium
      • Hyperpolarization (motions in reverse direction)
    • Otolithic organ
      • Utricle
      • Saccule
      • Hair cells
        • Crystals
      • Linear acceleration / gravity
        • Cilia of hair cells
        • Action potential
        • Brain
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4
Q

Sound, general

A
  • Sound is a sensation generated by pressure waves in the air
  • In a physical sense, a sound wave can be characterized by its:
    • Amplitude
    • Wavelength or frequency (pitch)
    • Speed
  • Sound intensity
  • Loudness
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5
Q

Inner ear

Structure

A
  • The internal ear is based on the cochlea
  • Cochlea is a duct forming a spiral around a bone column, divided into three chambers (scala) by:
    • Basilar membrane
    • Lamina spiralis ossea
    • Ressiner’s membrane / vestibular membrane
  • Perilymph (Na+)
    • Scala vestibuli
    • Scala tympani
  • Endolymph (K+)
    • Scala media
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6
Q

Inner ear

Organ of Corti

A
  • The hearing organ
  • Consists of receptor cells called hair cells (due to their stereocilia, modified epithelial cells)
    • The hair cells are resting on the basilar membrane and reaching into the space of the cochlear duct
  • Supproting cells in the organ of Corti:
    • Cells of Deiters
    • Cells of Claudius
    • Calls of Hensen
  • Role of these supporting cells: during displacement of the basilar membrane, the hair cells touch the tectorial membraneexcitation
  • Receptor cells of the organ of Corti have no axons
    • Neural impulse is is conducted by the bipolar neurons of the spiral ganglion
      • Their axons towards the CNS form the acustic nerve
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7
Q

Hearing

Molecular level of hearing

A
  • Stage 0
    • Displacement: mechano-sensitive cation channels
  • Stage 1
    • Depolarizing, potassium current
    • Depolarization
  • Stage 2
    • Voltage dependent calcium channels opens: calcium influx
  • Stage 3
    • Calcium sensitive basolateral potassium channel opens: potassium efflux
  • Stage 4
    • Repolarization or hyperpolarization
  • Stage 5
    • Calcium sequestration
  • Stage 6
    • Oscillation membrane potential
    • Amplification
  • Stage 7
    • Glutamate transmission
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8
Q

Hearing

Afferent auditory pathway

A
  1. Axons of spiral ganglion
    • Auditory nerve
  2. Cochlear nucleus
    • Stellate cells:
      • Tonotopically arranged
      • Intensity
    • Bushy cells:
      • Generates a time mark
      • Spatial orientation by sound
  3. Olivary nucleus
    • Localization of the sound
    • Analysis of the intensity
  4. Nucleus of lateral lemniscus
  5. Ventral colliculus
    • Localization of the sound
  6. Medial geniulate nucleus
    • Preparation of a motor response
  7. Primary auditory cortex
    • Organized in several layers
    • Recognized frequency and direction
    • Tonotopic organized
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9
Q

Hearing

Efferent auditory pathway

A
  • Travels back to the CGM and lateral colliculus​
  1. The olivo-cochlear bundle innervates the three outer rows of hair cells: may play a role in tuning their mechano-sensitive sensitivity​
  2. Fiber from the colliculi, will adjust the tension of the m. stapedius and m. tensor tympani​
  • M. stapedius: will dampen the vibration of the stapes by pulling the neck of the bone, helps in controlling the amplitude of the soundwaves​
  • M. tensor tympani: will when tensed pull the malleus medially which will tense the tympanic membrane and dampen the vibrations (can be tensed voluntarily)​
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10
Q

Vestibular apparatus

Role of vestibular apparatus

A
  • Provides CNS with information on the spatial position and the motion of the head
    • Thus generating static and kinetic information
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11
Q

Vestibular apparatus

How is the vestibular apparatus connected to the audiroty organ?

A

Connected to the auditory organ via the cochlear duct which is filled with endolymph

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12
Q

Vestibular apparatus

What does the vestibular apparatus consists of, and what do the different parts sense?

A
  • Three semicircular canals
    • Sense physical movement of the head
  • Otolithic organ
    • Sense linear acceleration (gravity)
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13
Q

Vestibular apparatus

Semicircular canals

A
  • Sense physical movement of the head
  • Filled with endolymph
    • When the head moves, endolymph flows to the ampulla
    • Endolymph pushes the cupula with hair cells that transduce the mechanical movement to electrical signal
    • The hair cells have a certain orientation:
      • The kinocilium of every cell is oriented in the same direction
      • In the ampulla the displacement of the endolymph bends the stereocilia toward the kinocilium, the cation conductance of the cell increases and depolarization occurs
      • Motion in the reverse direction hyperpolarizes the cell
  • Depolarization causes neurotransmitter release on the other pole of the sensory epithelium: this stimulates the primary afferent nerve-ending located there
  • The majority of the fibers travel via the vestibular nerve to the four nuclei of the vestibular ganglion of the brain-stem, while the minority directly innervate the cerebellum
  • From the vestibular nuclei, afferent branches innervate oculomotor muscles, as well as the spinal cord
  • Works in a push-pull fashion
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14
Q

Vestibular apparatus

Otolitic organ

A
  • Location: utricle and saccule
  • Senses linear acceleration (gravity)
  • Crystals (calcium carbonate) attached to hair cells with gel
  • Acceleration results in:
    • The crystals move and physically pull on the cilia of the hair cells that they are attached to​
    • Gives action potential​
    • Goes to the brain​
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