Anatomy
Inner Ear functions
Pathologies
Hearing Loss
Miscellaneous
100

What comprises the Outer Ear?

Pinna & External Auditory Canal

100

What is Phase Locking

when a singular fiber is firing at the same point during a phase of a sound wave. 

100

What is Otitis Media & what tympanogram goes with it 

Inflammation and infection of the ear from Effusion. Happens more often in kids, and occurs with Tympanogram B and C 

100

What is conductive hearing loss 

hearing loss that is caused by the disfunction or breaking of physical structures within the ear. 
100

What ways do you remove cerumen and don't remove cerumen

Do: use mechanical tools such as loops or curettes, do buy OTC drugs, lubrication for dry ear wax or vacuum suction 

DO NOT: use Q-tips (perforate TM or cerumen impactation) and Ear Candling 

200

What is the function of the Outer Ear

To amplify sounds from the free field to the tympanic membrane and to help in localization (binaural & interaural) 

200

What is the Volley Principle 

When a soundwave is moving too fast (rate saturation), so several different neurons fire at a specific point, to convey the frequency of the wave. 

200

What is Otosclerosis and what is it's cure and it's tympanogram 

Building up bone around the ossicles particularly the Stapes

Can be fixed with a Stapedectomy  

tympanogram A (s) 

200

What is Presbycusis Sensory Hearing Loss

Death of Hair cells, hearing is less clear. 

low frequency hearing loss 

200

What is Impedance 

Resistance to movement, is affected by mass and stiffness. 

300

What is the correct order of the Ossicles

Malleus, Incus, Stapes

300

What is two-tone suppression?

When a second noise is added above or below the characteristic frequency, therefore dimming the clarity of the characteristic frequency 

300

What is Ossicular Discontinuation and it's tympanogram 

When the ossicular chain is disconnected, it is caused by temporal bone fracture, tympanic membrane perforation from trauma, chronic otitis Media or Choleatetomas. 

Type A (d) 


300

What is Neural Presbycusis Hearing Loss

loss of auditory nerve cells 

start with 35,500 lose 2,100 per decade. 

low frequency hearing loss 

300

What are two ways to test immittance 

MEMR & tympanometry 

400

What are the three canals found in the Cochlea

Vestibular Canal (connects to the oval window)

Middle Canal (Scala Media) 

Tympanic Canal (connects to the round window) 

400

What are the factors of Impedance

Stiffness (affects low frequency) 

Mass (affects high frequency) 

400

What is the role of the Stapedius Muscle

to prevent loud noises from harming the inner ear. Prevents low frequencies from passing through

Slow (10 - 150 ms), but can be activated prior to self talk

400

What is Mechanical/Cochlear Conductive Hearing Loss 

thickening/stiffening of the basilar membrane 

Low frequency hearing loss 

400

what are the uses of clinical immittance tests

to differentiate between middle ear diagnosis (tympanometry)

to differentiate between cochlear or retrocochlear diagnosis (MEMR) 

500

What are some of the differences between Inner and Outer Hair Cells

Inner Hair cells are Afferent Neurons, they are shorter therefore moved by endolymph, and they tell us when a sound is present. 

Outer Hair Cells are efferent neurons, they are longer therefore moved by the tectorial membrane and they allow us to interpret what the sound is saying (clarity) 

500

What does the Equal Loudness Contour show

Not all frequencies are heard at the same loudness. (low frequencies are quieter, higher frequencies are louder) 

500

Why do kids get ear infections more often than adults?

Their Eustachian tubes are flatter than adults leading to an increase in effusion. 
500

what is Metabolic Presbycusis

deteriorating of the stria vascularis

unable to produce endolymph for the hair cells so they don't function as well 

500

What is Right ipsilateral, right contralateral, left ipsilateral, left contralateral and what test do they belong to 

MEMR 

RI: probe right, measure right 

RC: probe right, measure left

LI: Probe left, measure Left

LC: probe left, measure right