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The Ear, Moore 4th ed. pp. 962-976 External Ear Auricle - is the outer part of the ear, made of cartilage and skin. Parts: Concha - is the innermost depression, the one that the tip of the upper curve of the ear curves into. Antihelix is the ridge outside the concha. It ends above in two crura, and below in the antitragus which is the ridge over the bottom part of the concha. Scapha is the dent outside the antihelix, the thing that curves under the outer edge of the ear. Helix is the outer formation - the ridge around the ear that sits above the scapha. Tragus is the piece in front - the little bump. Lobule is, well, the lobule. Arterial Supply is the posterior auricular and superficial temporal arteries. Nerve Supply is from the great auricular nerve to the area below the external acoustic meatus, and the auriculotemporal nerve from CN V3 to the skin above the opening. Lymph drainage from above, outside goes to the superficial parotid lymph nodes, and the medial surface of the upper part goes to the mastoid and deep cervical nodes. The lobule drains to the superficial cervical lymph nodes. External Acoustic Meatus is the opening that goes inward to the inner parts of the ear. It continues through the tympanic part of the temporal bone, to the tympanic membrane, which is about 2-3 cm deep in adults. One-third, outside, is still cartilage, while the inner 2/3 are bony, covered by a thinner skin that is continuous with the tympanic membrane. There are subcutaneous glands that produce earwax. The tympanic membrane is about 1 cm around, and is the border between the external acoustic meatus and the tympanic cavity of the middle ear. It is a very thin skin outside, and the inside is mucous membrane. It dips in, the base of the dip being the umbo, which bounces light back like a parabola. (Important when looking in an ear - the cone of light.) Divisions: Flaccid part - the upper part without fibers. It forms the Page 1 of 6 lateral wall of the superior recess of the tympanic cavity on the inside. Tense part - has radial and circular fibers. There are ridges and bumps due to the malleus bone pressing on it. The Posterior mallear fold comes off the top, to bend again in the anterior mallear fold, where the malleus sticks out its lateral process and handle to the point of the umbo. Innervation: the auriculotemporal nerve, and a small auricular branch of the vagus on the external skin side of the tympanic membrane, and the glossopharyngeal on the inside. The membrane works by vibrating to air and moving the ossicles in the middle ear, which pass the message to the internal ear. Middle Ear It is found in the petrous part of the tympanic bone and contains the tympanic cavity, the epitympanic recess, and the chorda tympani nerve of CN VII. The tympanic cavity is an air chamber with the auditory ossicles. Its walls are: Tegmental Roof - the tegmen tympani is a thin bony plate that separates the cavity from the dura that is in the middle cranial fossa. The Floor is the jugular wall, a layer of bone that separates the cavity from the IJV about where it meets the sigmoid sinus. The lateral (membranous) wall is the tympanic membrane and slightly above, the bone of the epitympanic recess. The medial (labyrinthinine) wall separates the tympanic cavity from the internal ear. It is a slight mucosa over the promontory of the basal turn of the cochlea. The mucosa contains part of the tympanic nerve and plexus. The carotid (anterior) wall separates the cavity from the carotid canal, and has the internal carotid running against it on the outside. It is bony, but at the top of the wall has the pharyngotympanic (auditory) tube opening and a canal for tensor tympani muscle. The posterior (mastoid) wall has an opening at the upper part which is called the aditus which connects the cavity to the mastoid cells. The facial nerve canal descendes between the posterior wall and the antrum, medial to the aditus. The Mastoid Antrum Is a cavity in the mastoid process of the temporal bone, and separated from the middle cranial fossa by the tegmen tympani, a small bony wall (continued from over the roof of the tympanic cavity). The facial nerve canal runs under it. Its floor communicates with the mastoid cells through small openings. Page 2 of 6 It is lined by mucous membrane. It can get infected via an ear infection and lead to bone infection. Mastoid cells - Auditory Ossicles form a chain of bones from the tympanic membrane to the oval window, which is an opening in the medial wall of the cavity that leads to the vestibule of the inner ear. The malleus is the end of the chain attached to the tympanic membrane, and the stapes blocks the oval window hole. They are covered with mucous membrane but not periosteum. Malleus - functions as a lever with anterior and lateral processes. The anterior process and the handle are attached to the membrane. The superior head lies in the epitympanic recess. It articulates with the incus. The neck dents into the flaccid part of the tympanic membrane. The handle is embedded in the tympanic membrane and moves with it. The tensor tympani muscle has a tendon that inserts into the handle near the neck. Incus The body is in the epitympanic recess and attaches to the head of the malleus. The long limb process lies parallel to the handle of the malleus and attaches to stapes through a projection - the lenticular process. The short limb process is connected to the back wall of the cavity. Stapes The head attaches to the incus. Two crura make a horseshoe type shape to attach to the base. The base fits into the oval window. It is much smalle than the tympanic membrane, so the vibratory force is amplified on it. The auditory ossicles increase the force of vibrations while reducing the amplitude. Muscles with the Ossicles dampen movement. Tensor tympani arises from the superior cartilage part of the pharyngotympanic tube, the greater wing of the sphenoid, and the petrous part of the temporal bone, and inserts into the handle of malleus. It pulls the handle inward, which tightens the tympanic membrane and reduces the amplitude of its movements. It protects from too much vibration in loud sounds and is supplied by the mandibular nerve. Stapedius is inside the pyramid of the back wall of the tympanic cavity. It gives off a tendon that passes through a small foramen and attaches to the neck of stapes. It pulls stapes back and tips it in the oval window, which Page 3 of 6 reduces the oscillatory range. It filters sound this way. If it is paralyzed (CN VII) there is an excessive enhancement of hearing. Pharyngotympanic Tube - connects the tympanic cavity (through a hole in the front wall) to the nasopharynx. One-third laterally is bony and the rest is cartilage. It is lined by mucous membrane that is continous with the tympanic cavity’s and also the nasopharynx’s. It equalizes pressure between the middle ear and the atmosphere! This is important so the tympanic membrane can 1. move and 2. not explode. It is normally closed, but opens by the action of the contracted levator veli palati muscle pressing against one wall of cartilage, while the tensor veli palati pulls the other. (Swallowing, yawning, pop the eardrums.) The arteries of the tube are: Ascending pharyngeal artery which is a branch of the external carotid. Maxillary artery: Middle meningeal branch Artery of pterygoid canal branch. Veins drain into the pterygoid venous plexus Nerves come from the tympanic plexus which come from Facial nerve Glossopharyngeal nerve Fibers from pterygopalatine ganglion The Internal Ear Bony Labyrinth fills the otic capsule, a piece of dense bone that surrounds it - it is fulled with fluid. Cochlea is the shell shaped part with the cochlear duct. Its spiral canal begins at the vestiblue and wraps around the modiolus, a bony core containing canals for blood vessels and the cochlear nerve. The outermost turn (basal) of the cochlea produces the promontory - an indentation seen on the inner wall of the tympanic cavity. There is a cochlear aqueduct on the basal side that opens the bony labyrinth to the subarchnoid space near the jugular foramen. The cochlea is divided into: Cupula - the point inside where the spiral starts First turn Second turn Vestibule is a small chamber containing the utricle and saccule. Oval Window is a spot on the lateral wall, where the stapes attaches. It opens through the aqueduct of the vestibule to the posterior Page 4 of 6 cranial fossa. It extends to the posterior part of the petrous part of the temporal bone and opens. It transmits the endolymphatic duct and two blood vessels. It has three recesses, the elliptical, the cochlear, and the spherical (from top to bottom). They have perforations for nerve fibers. The Semicircular Canals communicate with the vestibule. They open five times into the vestibule (not 6 - the ant. and post. share one opening).Each has one swollen end, the ampulla. There are three, occupying 3 planes: Anterior Posterior Lateral The Membranous Labyrinth is the set of sacs and ducts inside the bony labyrinth. It is filled with endolymph, instead of perilymph which is in the bony part. It is suspended in the bony labyrinth, not free. There are two divisions, the cochlear labyrinth and the vestibular labyrinth. Spiral ligament is a thickening of the periosteal lining and secures the cochlear duct to the spiral canal of the cochlea. The semicircular ducts open into the utricle through five holes. The utricle communicates with the saccule through the utriculosaccular duct, from which the endolymphatic duct arises. The saccule communicates with the cochlea through a uniting duct. The endolymphatic duct runs through the bone of the posterior cranial fossa and comes out in a blind pouch - the endolymphatic sac, which stores extra fluid. Vestibular Labyrinth Utricle and Saccule have sensory epithelium. The areas in which it is found are called the maculae. These cells attach to the vestibulocochlear nerve. The sensory neurons are in the vestibular ganglia in the internal acoustic meatus. Semicircular Canals contain the semicircular ducts, which have ampullae at one end. The ampulla contain sensory ampullary crests that record movement. The cell bodies of these neurons are in the vestibular ganglia. Cochlear Duct is the spiral tube inside the cochlea. It is held in place by the spiral ligament and the osseous spiral lamina of the modiolus. The duct divides the canal into two channels, communicating at the helicotrema, the open space at the inner end of the spiral. The pressure from the stapes pass through the scala vestibuli, one of the channels, wrap around through the helicotrema, and continue back around the spiral outwards through the scala tympani, the other channel. At the end, it vibrates the round Page 5 of 6 cochlear window, which is closed by the secondary tympanic membrane. The organ of Corti is the auditory receptive part, situated on the inside of the duct on the basilar membrane (floor of the duct) and overlaid by the tectorial membrane. Page 6 of 6