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Anatomy of the Sensorineural Mechanism
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Three Main Subdivisions of the Labyrinth
The Bony Labyrinth Zemlin (1998) Three Main Subdivisions of the Labyrinth cochlea semicircular canals (vestibular system) vestibule (vestibular system, mainly)
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Bony labyrinth: Hard, bony outer shell.
Minifie, Hixon, & Williams (1973) Membranous labyrinth: Fully contained inside the bony labyrinth; like a convoluted-shaped water balloon stuff inside the bony labyrinth.
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Another view of the membranous labyrinth
Perkins & Kent (1986)
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Again with the membranous labyrinth, this time all by itself; i. e
Again with the membranous labyrinth, this time all by itself; i.e., with the entire bony labyrinth stripped away. Deutsch & Richards (1979)
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Schematic and partially unrolled view of the middle ear and labyrinth showing the scala vestibuli, the scala media (cochlear duct), and the scala tympani, along with the cochlear fluids (endolymph & perilymph). Zemlin (1998)
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Cuts through an unrolled and a rolled cochlea
Deutsch & Richards (1979)
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Cut through an unrolled cochlea
modiolus (core of bone that cochlea is wrapped around) spiral ganglion (8N cell bodies) Organ of Corti basilar membrane Reissner’s membrane tectorial membrane Deutsch & Richards (1979)
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Detail of a single cut through the cochlea showing the Organ of Corti, 8th N fibers entering through a tunnel in the spiral lamina (the habenula perforata), the spiral ligament, and the stria vascularis. Deutsch & Richards (1979)
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modiolus spiral ligament
Notice the stria vascularis (also area vascularis) – the only good picture I have of this. The s.v. secretes endolymph. Notice also the spiral ligament, which attaches the b.m. to the bony wall of the cochlea, and the limbus (or limbus spiralis), a fibrous covering of the spiral lamina. Zemlin (1968), Fig. 6-48) modiolus spiral ligament
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Detail of the Organ of Corti
Stevens (1951) Any cut through the cochlea will show 1 inner hair cell (IHC) and 3 (sometimes 4) outer hair cells (OHCs). This unit – 1 IHC & 3-4 OHCs – is referred to as a hair cell channel. There are about 3,000 channels in the human cochlea. (That number will become important later when we discuss cochlear implants.)
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Another view of the Organ of Corti
(Note: In this figure, and many others you will see, each HC has one nerve fiber. This is way wrong.* More later.) *The author/artist is not mistaken. The anatomy has just been simplified.
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Quiz: Which way to the modiolus, which way to spiral ligament?
Note: Innervation pattern shown here is accurate: many-to-one for IHCs, one-to-many for OHCs. More later.
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Yet Another View of the Organ of Corti
Note that the OHCs are shaped like a test tube; the IHC is flask-shaped.
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Note that the cilia are arranged according to height – short hairs on the modiolus side, taller hairs on the spiral ligament side. (Figure shows three cilia per HC; the actual number is much larger – ~ per HC.) IHC OHC modiolus
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Electron micrograph of a hair bundle as seen from above
Electron micrograph of a hair bundle as seen from above. Note: (1) cilia are arranged according to height, (2) cilia are arranged in a very distinctive pattern, variously described as a ‘W’ or sometimes a ‘V’ shape. modiolus spiral ligament
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IHCs OHCs spiral ligament modiolus
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reticular lamina (reticular membrane)
Composed of collagen, the RL supports the HCs from above.
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reticular lamina (reticular membrane)
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The cochlear and vestibular braches of the 8th cranial nerve
Deutsch & Richards (1979)
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The cochlear and vestibular braches of the 8th cranial nerve
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