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Experimental confirmation that vibrations at soft tissue conduction sites induce hearing by way of a new mode of auditory stimulation

  • Marrigje de Jong , Ronen Perez , Cahtia Adelman , Shai Chordekar , Melissa Rubin , Leonid Kriksunov and Haim Sohmer EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: August 26, 2011
Journal of Basic and Clinical Physiology and Pharmacology
From the journal Volume 22 Issue 3

Abstract

Background: A new mode of auditory stimulation has been demonstrated which is through soft tissue conduction (STC). It involves evoking auditory sensations by applying the clinical bone vibrator to the skin over soft tissue (not over bone) sites on the head and neck.

Methods: This study was designed to show that stimulation by STC excites the cochlea in a way similar to that of air conduction (AC) and bone conduction (BC).

Results: It is shown here that auditory nerve brainstem evoked response (ABR) thresholds in mice and in the fat sand rat to AC, to BC and to STC stimulation are all elevated following administration of drugs (salicylic acid and furosemide) which depress the cochlear amplifier. In addition, the present study brings evidence that STC stimulation is not a variant of BC since the sound pressures recorded in the occluded external auditory canal (the occlusion effect) in response to STC are significantly smaller than that to BC stimulation, though both are of equal loudness.

Conclusions: This new mode, STC, therefore appears to bypass the middle ear mechanisms and consequently may contribute to auditory diagnosis.


Corresponding author: Prof. Haim Sohmer, Department of Medical Neurobiology (Physiology), The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, PO Box 12272, Jerusalem 91120, Israel Phone: +972-2-6758385, Fax: +972-2-6439736

Published Online: 2011-08-26
Published in Print: 2011-09-01

©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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