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Transcript
Chapter 7: The Sensory Systems
Lesson 7.2
The Ear
The Ear
A. Anatomy of the ear
1. External Ear (Outer)
2. Middle Ear (Tympanic Cavity)
3. Internal Ear (Inner)
B. Functions of the ear
1. Hearing
2. Equilibrium (balance)
C. Disorders and infections of the ear
1. Deafness
2. Tinnitus
3. External Otis
4. Otitis Media
5. Labyrinthitis
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Anatomy of the Ear
• External ear
– Auricle (pinna)
• channels sound waves in many animals
• not very helpful in humans
– Auditory canal (external acoustic meatus)
• Short tube, one inch long, ¼ inch in diameter
• Walls of the canal are lined with skin cells with
Ceruminous glands = secrete cerumen (earwax)
• Earwax – cleans, lubricates, and protects
– Tympanic membrane (Ear drum)
• Separates outer ear from middle ear
• Membrane vibrates when sound waves strike it
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Anatomy of the Ear
• Middle ear (Tympanic Cavity)
• Small open chamber in temporal lobe of skull
• Oval Window is a membrane covered opening
– Ossicles (smallest bones in human body)
•
•
•
•
•
They connect tympanic membrane to oval window
Transmit AND amplify sound waves
Hammer = maleus
Anvil = incus
Stirrup = stapes
– Eustachian tube
• Connects the middle ear to the pharynx
• Serves to equalize the pressure on either side of the tympanic
membrane
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Anatomy of the Ear
• Internal ear (inner ear)
• Cochlea – Snail like structure used for hearing
• Vestibulocochlear nerve – carries information to brain
– Cochlear nerve (hearing information)
– Vestibular nerve (balance information)
• Vestibule & Semicircular canals
– Used in coordination of balance.
– Semicircular canals (Bony labyrinth) filled with:
» Clear fluid (perilymph)
» Membrane covered tubes (membranous labyrinth)
» Inside tubes is thicker fluid (endolymph)
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Anatomy of the Ear
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Functions of the Ear
• Hearing - Sound waves enter the auditory canal & cause tympanic
membrane to vibrate
- This vibration stimulates the ossicles to transmit and
amplify vibrations to the oval window.
- The oval window vibrations are passed to the cochlea
- Cochlea
- cochlear duct (membranous labyrinth) filled with the
Organ of Corti – contains receptor hairs
- As the fluid in the cochlea vibrates, the receptor hairs
are stimulated:
- short stiff hairs stimulated by high pitch sounds
- long flexible hairs by low pitch sounds
- Receptor hairs transmit signals through the
vestibulocochlear nerve to the brain
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Functions of the Ear
• Equilibrium (balance)
– Vestibule contains three semicircular canals
• Tiny receptor hairs in the semicircular canals are
stimulated by the moving endolymph
• The receptor hairs stimulate the vestibular nerve and
transmit information to the cerebellum
• Information about the position of the head, orientation and
motion are also sent.
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.
Disorders and Infections of the Ear
• Deafness – term for any loss of hearing
– Many causes: damage to hair receptors, excessive earwax, scaring on
the tympanic membrane, etc..
– Presbycusis = age related hearing loss
• In-canal hearing aid, half shell, behind the ear
• Tinnitus – “ringing in the ear”
– Caused by damaged hair cells (move randomly) from repeat sounds
• External otitis (swimmer’s ear) = fungal infection of auditory canal
• Otitis media (middle ear infection) = bacterial/viral infection
– Associated with upper respiratory infections in infants (tubes to drain)
• Labyrinthitis (inner ear infection) swelling disrupts semicircular canals
– Causes Vertigo (dizziness), chronic = Meniere disease
© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.
Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.