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Tips To Improve Hearing & Balance - The Audiology Clinic

The human ear is categorized into three parts: the outer (external) ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear. All the three parts of the ear are involved in the hearing but inner ear is also responsible for balance. Consult with The Audiology Clinic in Dublin, Naas, Mellow and Limerick to learn more about hearing disorders, tinnitus, vertigo/dizziness, and balance disorders and treatment options.

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Tips To Improve Hearing & Balance - The Audiology Clinic

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  1. Tips to Improve Hearing and Balance Functioning of the Ear (Outer, Middle, and Inner) The analysis of the ear can be difficult as the ear is responsible for hearing as well as for balance. The human ear is categorized into three parts: the outer (external) ear, the middle ear, and the inner ear. All the three parts of the ear are involved in the hearing but inner ear is also responsible for balance. Consult with The Audiology Clinic in Dublin, Naas, Mellow and Limerick to learn more about hearing disorders, tinnitus, vertigo/dizziness, and balance disorders and treatment options. The outer ear is consists of the pinna (auricle) and ear canal. It accumulates sound waves and addresses them into the ear. Additionally, Pinna (auricle) also protects the eardrum from hearing, tinnitus, vertigo/dizziness, and balance disorders.

  2. If we talk about middle ear then we can say it is an air-filled space dwelled at the sides and base of the skull. Air pressure is balanced at this space by the Eustachian tube which seeps away into the nasopharynx. The malleus, incus, and stapes, are the three small ossicles, positioned next to the tympanic membrane. All these three small ossicles are appended like a string to the tympanic membrane and transform sound waves into mechanical vibrations. The stapes fills the oval window, connected to the inner ear. The inner ear has two organs- the semicircular canals (controls balance) and the cochlea (covers hearing and sound pressure). Basically, it has two functions i.e hearing as well as balance. The inner ear is a network of tubes filled with fluid enclosed in the temporal bone of the skull. The bony tubes also called as the bony labyrinth has three divisions: the cochlea (controls balance, the semicircular canals (covers balance), and the vestibule (it connects cochlea and semicircular canals). The bony labyrinth is filled with perilymph fluid, this is where the cells responsible for hearing are located. Fluid waves present in the Cochlea stimulate the hearing nerve endings, which produce an electrical impulse. These impulses are then forwarded to the brain for interpretation as sound. The flow of fluid in the balance chambers (vestibule and three semicircular canals) also stimulates nerve endings, producing in electrical impulses to the brain, where they are described as motion. How do you hear? Let us discuss the functioning of the inner ear. First of all, sound waves enter into the ear canal and produce vibrations into the eardrum. The Eardrum transfers these vibrations into the inner ear (cochlea) via the string of tiny ossicles. The Cochlea consists of tons of small hair cells, these hair cells convert the vibrations into electrical signals that are transferred to the brain by the hearing nerve. After that, the brain helps in making you clear that you are hearing a sound and what that sound belongs to. How to do maintenance of balance The curriculum of the human balance system is not only maintained by the vestibular system but also through visual and sensory systems. If any of these systems injured, you may feel dizziness or loss of balance. The brain utilises the visual system in order to help enlighten us in surroundings while the vestibular system distinguishes circular motion and straight line movement as well. On the other hand, the sensory system monitors the state of our body with reference to the ground. The brain gets signals from all these systems and concocts the information found to produce consciousness.

  3. When we move the fluid of the tubes, inside the vestibular system also moves. This movement of fluid results sensory cells to bend. This modification results in an electrical signal which is transmitted, by a nerve, to the brain for interpretation. Once the brain translated the signals as an action, it commands your eyes in order to keep updated about your position. On the other hand, those signals which are conveyed to the brain by the vestibular system varies with the signals conducted by eyes and sensory system, it can give birth to conditions like hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo/dizziness, balance disorders, and motion sickness. To know more about the functioning of the ears and its disorders, contact The Audiology Clinic Dublin. Here our audiological scientist Dr Deepak Kumar provide advanced treatments to the patients of all age groups concerned with hearing disorders.

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