Decraemer W F, Khanna S M, Funnell W R
Laboratory of Biomedical Physics, University of Antwerp, Rijksuniversitair Centrum Antwerpen, Belgium.
Hear Res. 1994 Jun 15;77(1-2):19-37. doi: 10.1016/0378-5955(94)90250-x.
In the classical concept of the middle ear function the malleus rotates around a fixed axis which implies that at small amplitudes of vibration its displacement is essentially one dimensional. As a consequence malleus vibrations have been measured previously along a single viewing axis. As a first step in the study of the complete malleus motion we determined the three dimensional components at a single point (umbo) of the manubrium. To define 3-D motion it is in principle necessary to measure the vibrations from widely different observation angles. The viewing angles are limited however in our case by the ear canal geometry to about +/-15 degrees. In order to resolve the 3-D components under these conditions it is necessary to measure the vibration components with high accuracy. Amplitude and phase of the umbo vibrations were measured with a heterodyne interferometer over a wide frequency range (100 Hz to 20 kHz). The system included a two axis goniometer with the axes of rotation positioned at the focal plane of the interferometer objective lens. It was therefore possible to change the viewing angle in small increments around two orthogonal axes while keeping the same point in focus. From a redundant set of measurements the three orthogonal components of vibration were calculated by least squares fitting. The vector sum of the three components gives the three dimensional motion of the observed point. The vibration of the point on the umbo was found not to follow a straight line but an elliptical path instead. The shape of the ellipse and the inclination of the plane of the ellipse with respect to the stationary malleus position changed with frequency. These observations are consistent with our earlier findings that the mode of malleus vibration changes with frequency [Decraemer et al. (1991) Hear. Res. 54, 305-318].