VA Loma Linda Healthcare System, Loma Linda, CA, 92357, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Loma Linda University Health, Loma Linda, CA, 92350, USA.
Hear Res. 2019 Mar 1;373:48-58. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2018.12.005. Epub 2018 Dec 15.
Perforations of the tympanic membrane (TM) alter its structural and mechanical properties, thus resulting in a deterioration of sound transmission through the middle ear (ME), which presents itself clinically as a conductive hearing loss (CHL). The resulting CHL is proposed to be due to the loss of the pressure difference across the TM between the outer ear canal space and the ME cavity, a hypothesis which has been tested with both theoretical and experimental approaches. In the past, direct experimental observations had been either from the ME input (umbo) or the output of the stapes, and were focused mainly on the low frequency region. However, there was little documentation providing a thorough picture of the influence of systematically increasing sizes of TM perforations on ME sound transmission from the input (i.e., pressure at the TM or motion of the umbo) to the output (pressure produced by the motion of the stapes). Our study explored ME transmission in gerbil under conditions of a normal, intact TM followed by the placement of mechanically-induced TM perforations ranging from miniscule to complete removal of the pars tensa, leaving the other parts of ME intact. Testing up to 50 kHz, variations of ME transmission were characterized in simultaneously measured tone induced pressure responses at the TM (P), pressure responses in the scala vestibuli next to the stapes (P), and velocity measurements of the umbo (V), as well as by detailed descriptions of sound transmission from the TM to the stapes, i.e., the umbo transfer function (TF), the transfer of the sound stimulus along the ossicular chain as found from the ratio of cochlear pressure to umbo motion, and ME pressure gain (MEPG). Our results suggested that increasing the size of TM perforations led to a reduction in MEPG, which appeared to be primarily due to the reduction in the effective/initial mechanical drive to the umbo, with a relatively smaller decrease of sound transfer along the ossicular chain. Expansion of the perforation more than 25% appeared to drastically reduce sound transmission through the ME, especially for the higher frequencies.
鼓膜穿孔改变了其结构和力学特性,从而导致中耳(ME)的声传输恶化,这在临床上表现为传导性听力损失(CHL)。这种CHL 据推测是由于外耳耳道空间和 ME 腔之间的 TM 上的压力差丧失所致,这一假设已经通过理论和实验方法进行了测试。过去,直接的实验观察要么来自 ME 的输入(鼓环),要么来自镫骨的输出,主要集中在低频区域。然而,几乎没有文献提供全面的资料,说明 TM 穿孔尺寸的系统增加对 ME 声传输的影响,从输入(即 TM 处的压力或鼓环的运动)到输出(由镫骨运动产生的压力)。我们的研究探索了在正常、完整的 TM 条件下,随后在 ME 中放置机械诱导的 TM 穿孔,穿孔范围从极小到完全去除紧张部,而其他部分保持完整。在高达 50 kHz 的测试中,我们通过同时测量 TM 处的音调诱导压力响应(P)、紧邻镫骨的前庭阶压力响应(P)和鼓环的速度测量(V),以及通过 TM 到镫骨的声传输的详细描述,即鼓环传递函数(TF)、沿听小骨链传递的声音刺激,以及 ME 压力增益(MEPG),来描述 ME 传输的变化。我们的结果表明,TM 穿孔尺寸的增加导致 MEPG 的降低,这似乎主要是由于有效/初始机械驱动力到鼓环的减小,而沿听小骨链传递声音的减小相对较小。穿孔的扩大超过 25%似乎会极大地降低 ME 的声传输,尤其是对于较高的频率。