1 / 24

Mechanism of sound transduction , AUDITORY PATHOLOGY , AND AUDITORY PERCEPTION

Mechanism of sound transduction , AUDITORY PATHOLOGY , AND AUDITORY PERCEPTION.

mina
Download Presentation

Mechanism of sound transduction , AUDITORY PATHOLOGY , AND AUDITORY PERCEPTION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mechanism of sound transduction , AUDITORY PATHOLOGY , AND AUDITORY PERCEPTION BY : NUR AZMINA MOHD ZAILAN NUR FARHANA OTHMAN NUR ZULAIKHA MAT ZAWAWI NUR NABILA ROZAINI NUR ATHIRAH MOHD AZHAR

  2. Mechanism of sound transduction BY : NUR AZMINA MOHD ZAILAN NUR FARHANA OTHMAN

  3. HOW THE EAR HEARS ? AURICLE SOUND TYMPANIC MEMBRANE VESTIBULAR WINDOW (OVAL WINDOW) PERILYMPH AUDITORY OSSICLES (M, I, S ) SCALA VESTIBULI COCHLEA (ORGAN OF CORTI ) BRAIN

  4. COCHLEA • Long coiled tube • Three channels • The top tube is the scalavestibuli, which is connected to the oval window. The bottom tube is thescala tympani, which is connected to the round window. The middle tube is the scala media, which contains the Organ of Corti. The Organ of Corti sits on the basilar membrane, which forms the division between the scalae media and tympani.

  5. high frequency sounds stimulate the base of the cochlea, whereas low frequency sounds stimulate the apex. • Sound waves cause the oval and round windows at the base of the cochlea to move in opposite directions  •  causes the basilar membrane to be displaced and starts a traveling wave that sweeps from the base toward the apex of the cochlea 

  6. Organ of corti • The traveling wave causes the Organ of Corti to move up and down. • The tectorial membrane to move laterally over the hair cells. This motion bends the cilia and opens the trap-door channels . The influx of potassium and then calcium causes neurotransmitter release. Most of the afferent dendrites make synaptic contacts with the inner hair cells.

  7. Most of the afferent dendrites synapse on inner hair cells. • Most of efferent axons synapse on the outer hair cells. • The outer hair cells are active. • They move in response to sound and amplify the traveling wave. 

  8. Auditory Pathology

  9. Definition • Auditory Pathology:- The cause and effect of diseases relating to the sense of hearing.

  10. There are several major categories that can affect the auditory system:- • Developmental defects • Infections • Trauma • Vascular Disorders • Aging Disorders • Tumor

  11. Developmental defect • Potential development defects are numerous, and many of them are inherited. • Many inherited disorders result in congenital hearing loss; others result in progressive hearing loss later in life. Infections • Common cause of outer and middle ear disorder. • Caused by bacteria, virus or fungus. • Can result in significant sensorineural hearing loss. Trauma • Physical and acoustic • Physical- Ossicular disruption, fracture of temporal bone. • Acoustic- Due to excessive noise.

  12. Vascular disorder • Interruption of blood supply to the cochlea can cause a loss of hair cell function which result in permanent hearing loss. • Causes of blood supply interruption- stroke, diabetes mellitus. Aging disorder • Presbyacusis- a decline in hearing as a part of aging process.

  13. Types of Hearing Loss Critical Fact types: CONDUCTIVE: • processes that prevent sound from reaching the cochlea. It caused by problems in the external ear (often when the ear canal is blocked, by wax for example), or the middle ear (otitis, glue ear, damaged ossicles,…). SENSORINEURAL: • processes that damage hair cells, spiral ganglion cells (and/or the auditory nerve) or cochlear nucleus neurons.

  14. MIXED: • both conductive and sensorineural OTHER CONDITIONS • Central auditory processing disorders (CAPD) -primarily CNS problems, but may involve sensorineural hearing loss • Presbycusis

  15. Conductive

  16. Otitis Externa • Infections of the ear canal • Caused by bacteria, virus or fungus cultivated in the external ear canal.

  17. Otitis Media • Inflammation of middle ear. • Caused primarily by Eustachian tube dysfunction.

  18. Sensorineural

  19. Damaged Hair Cells

  20. Tumor in Vestibulocochlear nerve

  21. The ability to perceive and understand sounds with a specific organ; ears No auditory perception is inability to hear = deafness Different species have different range of hearing – dogs can hear high pitched sound that human can’t hear Auditory Perception

  22. Example of the range of hearing in different species

More Related