Stenfelt Stefan
Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Adv Otorhinolaryngol. 2011;71:10-21. doi: 10.1159/000323574. Epub 2011 Mar 8.
Bone conduction (BC) is the way sound energy is transmitted by the skull bones to the cochlea causing a sound perception. Even if the BC sound transmission involves several pathways including sound pressure induced in the ear canal, inertial forces acting on the middle ear ossicles and cochlear fluids, alteration of the cochlear space, and pressure transmission through the 3rd window of the cochlea, the BC sound ultimately produces a wave motion on the basilar membrane similar to that of air-conducted sound. The efficiency of the BC stimulation is largely dependent on the skull bone where the skull acts as a rigid body at low frequencies and incorporates different types of wave transmission at higher frequencies. The interaural stimulation difference is determined by the difference between contralateral and ipsilateral BC sound transmission: the transcranial BC sound transmission. To benefit from binaural processing, the transcranial transmission should be low, while the same should be high when using BC hearing aids for unilateral deaf subjects. By appropriately positioning the stimulation, high or low transcranial transmission can be achieved.
骨传导(BC)是声能通过颅骨传递至耳蜗从而引起声音感知的方式。即便骨传导声音传输涉及多种途径,包括耳道内产生的声压、作用于中耳听小骨和耳蜗内液体的惯性力、耳蜗空间的改变以及通过耳蜗第三窗的压力传输,但骨传导声音最终会在基底膜上产生类似于气导声音的波动。骨传导刺激的效率在很大程度上取决于颅骨,在低频时颅骨作为刚体起作用,而在高频时则包含不同类型的波传输。双耳刺激差异由对侧和同侧骨传导声音传输之间的差异决定,即经颅骨传导声音传输。为了从双耳处理中获益,经颅传输应该较低,而在为单侧聋患者使用骨传导助听器时则应该较高。通过适当地定位刺激,可以实现高或低的经颅传输。