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Commercially available CT scanners can detect significant anatomic differences in normal human middle ear ossicles.
Malleus, Incus and Stapes are the three middle ear ossicles which form an articulated chain and help in conduction of sound from external ear to inner ear.
In this paper, we report a three-chamber (ear canal, middle ear, and mastoid cavity) FE model of the right ear, incorporating middle ear ossicles, external ear canal, middle ear cavity, and mastoid cavity.
One of the best examples of such a major remnant of evolutionary and developmental history involves the mammalian middle ear ossicles (the malleus, incus, and stapes bones), all of which are derived from jaw bones of ancestral reptiles but which now play a key role in hearing by amplifying sounds.
The figure shows the middle ear ossicles partly exposed, as well as a few of the connections to, and in the context of, nearby anatomic components.
Vibrational analysis provides an illuminating view into the displacements of various components of the system (e.g., the motion of the sigmoid process or the middle ear ossicles), which supports the functional significance of the "ear trumpet" concept.
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Here, we will present the design and fabrication of an implantable system for contactless detection of the vibrations of the middle ear ossicle.
Excessive exudate often leads to conductive hearing loss by the obstruction of middle ear ossicle movement.
A model of the sensing system was used for in-vitro and in-vivo investigation of acoustical response of sheep's middle-ear ossicles.
The malleus, incus and stapes are middle ear bones (ossicles) that mechanically conduct sound from the tympanic membrane to the cochlea.
In mammals the ear consists of the outer sound-collecting pinna; the middle ear, which contains ossicles that function to match the mechanics of sound in air to sound in water; and the inner ear, which contains the cochlea.
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