Abstract

It has been suggested that tensor tympani muscle (TTM) contraction may be involved in the development of ear-related pathologies such as tinnitus, hyperacusis and otalgia, called the tonic tensor tympani syndrome (TTTS). However, as there is no precise measure of TTM function under normal and pathological states, its involvement remains speculative. When the TTM or the stapedius muscle (SM) contracts, they both generate an increase of middle ear stiffness that can be measured through middle ear admittance. However, this technique cannot differentiate the contraction between the two muscles. On the other hand, the air pressure measured in a sealed external auditory canal can provide a measure of the eardrum displacement that may be able to differentiate SM from TTM contraction. TTM is attached to the malleus, and its contraction causes a retraction of the eardrum inside the middle ear cavity, while SM can have a small but reversed effect on TTM displacement. To investigate this issue, we compared the middle ear admittance and air pressure in a sealed external ear canal upon auditory stimulation (sMEMC) and voluntary middle ear muscle contraction (vMEMC). In addition, we assessed the perceptual effect of vMEMC, including pitch and loudness matching of the fluttering noise produced by vMEMC and the threshold shifts, were measured. Out of the 14 ears tested, sMEMC was associated with a decrease of admittance in 93% (mean peak average: -0.06 ml, SD:0.04) and an increase of air pressure in 29% of ears (mean peak average: 8.1 Pa, SD:5.1). No decrease in air pressure was found upon sMEMC. For vMEMC (n = 8 ears), decreases were found for both admittance and air pressure in 100% and 88%, with a mean peak average of -0.38 ml, SD: 0.54 and -149 Pa, SD:156, for admittance and pressure respectively. These results suggest that SM and TTM are involved in sMEMC and vMEMC, respectively. In addition, vMEMC was associated with perceptual effects including a low-frequency sound, pitch-matched at ∼30 Hz (>15 dB SL), and a low-frequency hearing loss of at least 10 dB between 20 and 200 Hz. In conclusion, admittance and air pressure recordings provide useful and complementary information on middle ear muscle contraction and can be used to explore the middle ear function.

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