Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Which cranial nerves are associated with hearing?

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Which cranial nerves are associated with hearing?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Which cranial nerves are associated with hearing?

2 The organ of hearing and equilibrium
The Ear The organ of hearing and equilibrium

3 What is Sound? Pressure disturbance originating from a vibrating object Compressions and rarefactions of particles in a medium

4 What sound looks like

5 Pitch Frequency Number of waves that pass a given point in a given time Hearing range is 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz Higher frequency = higher pitch Lower frequency – lower pitch

6 Which disturbance is a higher pitch?

7 Loudness Amplitude Height of the wave (crest)
Intensity of the sound = energy Humans: 0.1 decibels to 120 dB (pain threshold = 130dB)

8 Which disturbance is louder?

9 Hearing Auditory area of temporal lobe cortex
Sound waves through the air must be perceived What type of receptors are involved?

10 Intro video

11 Three Parts External ear Middle ear Inner Ear

12

13 External ear: Auricle/Pinna

14

15 External ear: auditory canal
Lined with skin, bearing hairs, sebaceous glands, and modified sweat glands Secretes sticky cerumen (earwax): purpose? 1 inch long

16 Impacted eardrum

17 Boundary between external and middle ear: tympanic membrane
Connective tissue, thin Rich supply of nerves and blood vessels Cone shaped, apex points into ear Vibrates in response to sound waves entering the ear

18 Middle ear Small, air-filled chamber
Eardrum on one side, bone on other

19 Otitis media

20 Otitis media: middle ear inflammation

21 Or this…

22 Middle ear: eustachian tube
Linked to nasopharynx Closed by a membrane most of the time Opens briefly when yawn or swallow Equalizes middle ear pressure and external air pressure

23 Middle ear: ossicles Smallest bones in body
Suspended by tiny ligaments, linked together by joints Malleus secured to ear drum Stapes – base fits into oval window (entrance to cochlea)

24 Middle ear: ossicles Transmit vibratory motion of eardrum to oval window Sets fluids of inner ear in motion Eventually excites the hearing receptors

25 Problems… Chronic ear infections – ossicles can fuse
“glue ear”: stapes becomes fixed to the oval window Protection: Muscles help protect the eardrum and reduce sound transduction when accosted by loud noises

26 Inner ear Complicated structure Behind eye socket Secure site
Delicate receptor machinery

27 Inner ear: two divisions
Bony labyrinth: the cavity – filled with perilymph (fluid) Membranous labyrinth – inside the cavity, floating in perilymph, filled with endolymph

28 Inner ear: vestibule Equilibrium receptor region
Otoliths – increase sensitivity Respond to pull of gravity Report changes in head position

29 Inner ear: semicircular canals
Oriented in 3 planes Anterior Posterior Lateral Equilibrium receptors Conducts to vestibular nerve of 8th cranial nerve

30 Inner ear: cochlea Converts the physical vibrations of sound waves and converts them into electrical impulses

31 Inside the cochlea

32 Inner ear: cochlea Lined with receptors for hearing
Stimulated by bending of hairs: mechanoreceptors Organ of corti: receptor organ for hearing

33 Vestibulocochlear nerve (cranial nerve 8)
Cochlear branch Conducts to primary auditory cortex of temporal lobe Can damage this nerve when exposed to prolonged periods of loud noise Drugs = ototoxic agents

34 Hearing test


Download ppt "Which cranial nerves are associated with hearing?"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google