Evidence of tectorial membrane radial motion in a propagating mode of a complex cochlear model

  1. Hongxue Cai,
  2. Brett Shoelson, and
  3. Richard S. Chadwick*
  1. Section on Auditory Mechanics, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892
  1. Communicated by Jozef J. Zwislocki, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, March 4, 2004 (received for review December 1, 2003)

Abstract

Knowledge of vibratory patterns in the cochlea is crucial to understanding the stimulation of mechanosensory cells. Experiments to determine the motion of the cochlear partition and surrounding fluid are extremely challenging. As a result, the motion data are incomplete and often contradictory. The bending mechanism of hair bundles, thought to be related to the shear motion and endolymphatic flow between the tectorial membrane (TM) and reticular lamina (RL), is controversial. We, therefore, extend the frequency range of our previous hybrid analytical–finite-element approach to model the basal as well as apical regions of the guinea pig cochlea. We solve the fluid-solid interaction eigenvalue problem for the axial wavenumber, fluid pressure, and vibratory relative motions of the cochlear partition as a function of frequency. A simple monophasic vibratory mode of the basilar membrane is found at both ends of the cochlea. However, this simple movement is associated with a complex frequency-dependent relative deformation between the TM and the RL. We provide evidence of a radial component of TM motion that is out of phase with the RL and that facilitates the bending of outer hair cell stereocilia at appropriate frequencies at both the cochlear base and apex.

Footnotes

  • * To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Building 10, Room 5D/49, MSC 1417, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892. E-mail: chadwick{at}helix.nih.gov.

  • Abbreviations: BM, basilar membrane; CP, cochlear partition; IHC, inner hair cell; OC, organ of Corti; OHC, outer hair cell; RL, reticular lamina; TM, tectorial membrane.

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