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Perforations of the tympanic membrane (TM) can occur as a result of injury or inflammation of the middle ear. These perforations can lead to conductive hearing loss (HL), where in some cases the magnitude of HL exceeds that attributable to the observed TM perforation alone. We aim with this study to better understand the effects of location and size of TM perforations on the sound transmitting properties of the middle ear.
The middle ear transfer function (METF) of six human temporal bones (TB; freshly frozen specimen of body donors) were compared before and after perforation of the TM at different locations (anterior or posterior lower quadrant) and of different sizes (1mm, ¼ of the TM, ½ of the TM, and full ablation). The
METF were correlated with a Finite Element (FE) model of the middle ear, in which similar alterations were simulated.
The measured and simulated FE model METFs exhibited frequency and perforation size dependent amplitude losses at all locations and severities. In direct comparison, posterior TM perforations affected the transmission properties to a larger degree than perforations of the anterior quadrant. This could possibly be caused by an asymmetry of the TM, where the malleus-incus complex rotates and results in larger deflections in the posterior TM half than in the anterior TM half. The FE model of the TM with a sealed cavity suggest that small perforations result in a decrease of TM rigidity and thus to an increase in oscillation amplitude of the TM, mostly above 1 kHz.
The location and size of TM perforations influence the METF in a reproducible way. Correlating our data with the FE model could help to better understand the pathologic mechanisms of middle-ear diseases. If small TM perforations with uncharacteristically significant HL are observed in daily clinical practice, additional middle ear pathologies should be considered. Further investigations on the loss of TM pretension due to perforations may be informative.