| Literature DB >> 23762624 |
Mattia Carraro1, Jaina Negandhi, Jafri Kuthubutheen, Evan J Propst, Lukas Kus, Vincent Y W Lin, Robert V Harrison.
Abstract
The mammalian ear has an extraordinary capacity to detect very low-level acoustic signals from the environment. Sound pressures as low as a few μ Pa (-10 dB SPL) can activate cochlear hair cells. To achieve this sensitivity, biological noise has to be minimized including that generated by cardiovascular pulsation. Generally, cardiac pressure changes are transmitted to most peripheral capillary beds; however, such signals within the stria vascularis of the cochlea would be highly disruptive. Not least, it would result in a constant auditory sensation of heartbeat. We investigate special adaptations in cochlear vasculature that serve to attenuate cardiac pulse signals. We describe the structure of tortuous arterioles that feed stria vascularis as seen in corrosion casts of the cochlea. We provide a mathematical model to explain the role of this unique vascular anatomy in dampening pulsatile blood flow to the stria vascularis.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23762624 PMCID: PMC3671538 DOI: 10.1155/2013/941757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Otolaryngol ISSN: 2090-5742
Figure 1Scanning electron micrographs of (apical and lateral views) of the corrosion casts of cochlear vasculature in the pig.
Figure 4Scanning EM image of corrosion casts arterial and strial vessels of chinchilla cochlea. Note the convoluted arterioles that supply the stria vascularis.
Figure 3Partially filled corrosion casts of the pig cochlea showing only arterial blood supply vessels (capillary beds not filled). These images illustrate the extreme tortuosity in supply vessels to stria vascularis.
Figure 5Method for quantifying the degree of arterial convolutions in vessels that supply the stria vascularis.
Figure 2Tortuous arterioles that feed the stria vascularis (in pig), as seen in scanning electron images of corrosion cast specimens.
Figure 6Model of a convoluted tube showing the definition of a node, that is, the section that precedes a bend in the tube. The lower panel shows the graphical representation of the mathematical model. The sinusoidal input (left) represents cardiovascular pulse signal into a convoluted vessel. The model output values are graphed (center plot) according to the number of nodes in the model. The model output (right) shows the attenuated pulse signal.