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Title: [Changes in the auditory threshold for air and bone conduction in relation to middle ear pressure in probands with normal hearing]. Author: Maier W, Ross UH. Journal: Laryngorhinootologie; 1995 Sep; 74(9):525-30. PubMed ID: 7495432. Abstract: Under pressure in the tympanic cavity causes increased impedance of the middle ear. Gellé was the first to describe increased bone conduction levels following alteration of ear canal pressure in healthy ears. Up to now, no investigation which quantitatively describes the elevation of the hearing threshold induced by various levels of under pressure in the middle ear has been published. In a pressure chamber, we induced relative under pressure in the middle ears of 15 adults with normal hearing. We measured hearing thresholds and calculated medium values at four separate levels of under pressure. At an under pressure of 3.3 kPa, air conduction was reduced by a few dB at 500 and 1000 Hz. Alterations of bone conduction were first seen at 6.6 kPa accompanied by increased deterioration of air conduction. Both effects became more obvious at 10 kPa; and at a maximum under pressure of 13.3 kPa, a deterioration of air conduction by more than 25 dB was seen at 250, 500, and 1000 Hz. Bone conduction deteriorated by more than 10 dB at 500 and 1000 Hz. There was no uniformity in the development of bone conduction threshold in the condition of under pressure: Several ears expressed only slight changes, but in some ears we saw an increase of bone conduction at the same rate as air conduction. Minor alterations were observed in frequencies above 1000 Hz. These results may be only partially explained by middle ear effects like the reduction of the ostio-tympanic component of bone conduction caused by increased stiffness of the ossicles. We believe that disturbances of inner ear mechanics play a role in the deterioration of bone conduction levels, too.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]