Ear. I INTRODUCTION Ear, organ of hearing and balance. Only vertebrates, or animals
Publié le 11/05/2013
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line or rotates in any direction.
Each canal also contains sensory areas with sensory hair cells that project into a cone-shaped cap of gelatin.
Two of the semicircularcanals are in a vertical position and are used to detect vertical movement, such as jumping or falling.
The third canal is horizontal and detects horizontal movement,such as turning or spinning.
The action of the canals depends on the inertia of the fluid inside.
When the motion of the body changes, the fluid lags behind, causing the hair cells in the canal tobend.
The bending of the hair cells sends nerve impulses to the brain, which in turn informs the body of changes in the direction of movement.
III HEARING
Sound is a series of vibrations moving as waves through air or other gases, liquids, or solids.
A ringing bell, for example, sets off vibrations in the air.
Detection of thesevibrations, or sound waves, is called hearing.
The detection of vibrations passing through the ground or water is also called hearing.
Some animals can detect onlyvibrations passing through the ground, and others can hear only vibrations passing through water.
Humans, however, can hear vibrations passing through gases, solids, and liquids.
Sometimes sound waves are transmitted to the inner ear by a method of hearingcalled bone conduction.
For example, people hear their own voice partly by bone conduction.
The voice causes the bones of the skull to vibrate, and these vibrationsdirectly stimulate the sound-sensitive cells of the inner ear.
Only a relatively small part of a normal person’s hearing depends on bone conduction, but some totally deafpeople can be helped if sound vibrations are transferred to the skull bones by a hearing aid.
Humans hear primarily by detecting airborne sound waves, which are collected by the auricles.
The auricles also help locate the direction of sound.
Although somepeople have auricular muscles so well-developed that they can wiggle their ears, human auricles, when compared to those of other mammals, have little importance.Many mammals, especially those with large ears, such as rabbits, can move their auricles in many directions so that sound can be picked up more easily.
After being collected by the auricles, sound waves pass through the outer auditory canal to the eardrum, causing it to vibrate.
The vibrations of the eardrum are thentransmitted through the ossicles, the chain of bones in the middle ear.
As the vibrations pass from the relatively large area of the eardrum through the chain of bones,which have a smaller area, their force is concentrated.
This concentration amplifies, or increases, the sound.
When the sound vibrations reach the stirrup, the stirrup pushes in and out of the oval window.
This movement sets the fluids in the vestibular and tympanic canals inmotion.
To relieve the pressure of the moving fluid, the membrane of the oval window bulges out and in.
The alternating changes of pressure in the fluid of the canalscause the basilar membrane to move.
The organ of Corti, which is part of the basilar membrane, also moves, bending its hairlike projections.
The bent projectionsstimulate the sensory cells to transmit impulses along the auditory nerve to the brain.
A Loudness, Pitch, and Tone
Human ears are capable of perceiving an extraordinarily wide range of changes in loudness, the tiniest audible sound being about 1 trillion times less intense than asound loud enough to cause the ear pain.
The loudness or intensity of a noise is measured in a unit called the decibel.
The softest audible sound to humans is 0decibels, while painful sounds are those that rise above 140 decibels.
Besides loudness, the human ear can detect a sound’s pitch, which is related to a sound’s vibration frequency, or the number of sound waves passing into the ear in agiven period.
The greater the frequency, the higher the pitch.
The maximum range of human hearing includes sound frequencies from about 15 to about 18,000 waves,or cycles, per second.
Because the human ear cannot hear very low frequencies, the sound of one’s own heartbeat is inaudible.
At the other end of the scale, a highlypitched whistle producing 30,000 cycles per second is not audible to the human ear, but a dog can hear it.
The third characteristic of sound detected by the human ear is tone.
The ability to recognize tone enables humans to distinguish a violin from a clarinet when bothinstruments are playing the same note.
The least noticeable change in tone that can be picked up by the ear varies with pitch and loudness.
Another sonic phenomenon, known as masking, occurs because lower-pitched sounds tend to deafen the ear to higher-pitched sounds.
To overcome the effects ofmasking in noisy places, people are forced to raise their voices.
IV DISEASES OF THE HUMAN EAR
Some diseases of the ear can cause partial or total deafness.
In addition, most diseases of the inner ear are associated with a disturbance of balance.
Ear problemsshould be evaluated by specially trained physicians called otolaryngologists, who treat conditions ranging from eardrum injuries caused by physical trauma to bonydeposits in the inner ear caused by the aging process.
The auricle and the opening into the outer auditory canal may be missing at birth.
Acquired malformations of the outer ear include scarring from cuts and other wounds.Othematoma, known popularly as cauliflower ear, is a common result of injury to the ear cartilage followed by internal bleeding and excessive production of ear tissue.
Inflammation of the outer ear may result from any condition that causes inflammation of the skin, such as dermatitis, burns, and frostbite.
Erysipelas, a skin diseasecaused by bacteria, and seborrhea, a skin disease caused by the malfunction of the skin’s oil glands, are common afflictions of the auricle.
In the outer auditory canal,foreign bodies such as insects, as well as abnormal buildups of cerumen, cause ear disturbances and should be removed by a physician.
A Middle Ear Disorders
Diseases of the middle ear include perforation of the eardrum and infection.
Perforation of the eardrum may be caused by injury from a sharp object, a blow to the ear,or by sudden changes in atmospheric pressure.
Infection of the middle ear, whether acute or chronic, is called otitis media.
Acute otitis media with effusion includes all acute infections of the middle ear caused by pus-forming bacteria, which usually reach the middle ear by way of the eustachian tube.
Bacterial infection of the mastoid process, a cone-shaped, honeycombed projectionof bone behind the auricle, may occur as a complication of middle ear infections.
Hearing impairment often follows because newly malformed tissues affect the mobilityof the eardrum and the ossicles.
Painful swelling of the eardrum may require a surgical incision to permit drainage of the middle ear.
Since the use of penicillin and otherantibiotics became widespread, mastoid complications have become much less frequent.
Sometimes acute otitis media with effusion leads to a chronic infection thatdoes not respond readily to antibacterial agents.
Acute and chronic nonsuppurative otitis media, which do not involve the formation or discharge of pus, are caused by closure of the eustachian tube due to conditionssuch as a head cold, diseased tonsils and adenoids, inflammation of the sinuses, or riding in airplanes without pressurized cabins.
The chronic form can also result frombacterial infection.
Because the watery discharge impairs hearing, chronic otitis media in young children may interfere with language development.
A variety oftreatments are employed, including use of antibiotics and antihistamines, removal of tonsils and adenoids, and insertion of tubes into the middle ear to allow drainage..
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