4.3 Article

Forward and Reverse Middle Ear Transmission in Gerbil with a Normal or Spontaneously Healed Tympanic Membrane

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10162-020-00779-8

Keywords

middle ear transmission; spontaneously healed tympanic membrane; conductive hearing loss; otoacoustic emission; middle ear pressure gain; middle ear pressure loss

Funding

  1. VA Merit Award [C2296-R]
  2. Department of Otolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery, at Loma Linda University Health

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Research shows that spontaneously healed tympanic membranes have abnormalities in structure and mechanical properties, leading to deterioration in middle ear sound transmission. Experiments in a controlled perforation gerbil model indicate frequency-dependent loss in forward ME transmission, with smaller variations in the reverse direction, offering insights into conductive hearing loss in patients with abnormal tympanic membranes. Moreover, changes in distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) reflect altered ME transmission, confirming their utility in assessing cochlear and middle ear health.
Tympanic membranes (TM) that have healed spontaneously after perforation present abnormalities in their structural and mechanical properties; i.e., they are thickened and abnormally dense. These changes result in a deterioration of middle ear (ME) sound transmission, which is clinically presented as a conductive hearing loss (CHL). To fully understand the ME sound transmission under TM pathological conditions, we created a gerbil model with a controlled 50% pars tensa perforation, which was left to heal spontaneously for up to 4 weeks (TM perforations had fully sealed after 2 weeks). After the recovery period, the ME sound transmission, both in the forward and reverse directions, was directly measured with two-tone stimulation. Measurements were performed at the input, the ossicular chain, and output of the ME system, i.e., at the TM, umbo, and scala vestibuli (SV) next to the stapes. We found that variations in ME transmission in forward and reverse directions were not symmetric. In the forward direction, the ME pressure gain decreased in a frequency-dependent manner, with smaller loss (within 10 dB) at low frequencies and more dramatic loss at high frequency regions. The loss pattern was mainly from the less efficient acoustical to mechanical coupling between the TM and umbo, with little changes along the ossicular chain. In the reverse direction, the variations in these ears are relatively smaller. Our results provide detailed functional observations that explain CHL seen in clinical patients with abnormal TM, e.g., caused by otitis media, that have healed spontaneously after perforation or post-tympanoplasty, especially at high frequencies. In addition, our data demonstrate that changes in distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) result from altered ME transmission in both the forward and reverse direction by a reduction of the effective stimulus levels and less efficient transfer of DPs from the ME into the ear canal. This confirms that DPOAEs can be used to assess both the health of the cochlea and the middle ear.

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