Abstract

The Johns Hopkins Otologic Research Laboratory was founded in 1924 as the first human temporal bone laboratory within the United States. To better understand the contributions of the Johns Hopkins Otologic Research Laboratory to our understanding of presbycusis, we consulted with a medical librarian and archivist to search the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives, PubMed, JSTOR, and Johns Hopkins Bulletin for published and unpublished works from the lab. Between 1924 and 1938, Samuel J. Crowe, the Chairman of Otolaryngology, and anatomist Stacy R. Guild amassed a collection of ∼1,800 temporal bones. This collection allowed for an unprecedented period of discovery related to otologic disease. They combined hearing thresholds measured by the recently invented audiometer with new techniques for temporal bone decalcification, sectioning, and staining, and a method for the graphic reconstruction of the cochlea. Crowe and Guild used this unique opportunity to correlate otopathology with hearing and to make the first detailed descriptions of the otopathology of presbycusis. In 1931 and 1934, they observed spiral ganglion neuron and outer hair cell loss in the basal turn of the cochlea in individuals with high-frequency hearing loss. These were the first studies to reveal that stria vascularis degeneration and middle ear pathology were not the most common causes for high-frequency hearing loss. Aside from revealing the primary driving factors of presbycusis, this work provided insight into the tonotopic organization of the cochlea. After initially being recruited to help raise money for the laboratory, medical illustrator Max Brödel used the vertical histologic cross-sections of the cochlea to produce illustrations of the ear. The decision to produce histologic sections in the plane of the superior semicircular canal likely influenced Brödel's illustrations that share a similar orientation and would later become widely circulated. Significant contributions from the Otologic Research Laboratory were also made by Mary Hardy, D.Sc., a woman who has previously received little recognition for her work. The sectioning of temporal bones was stopped in 1938 due to World War II, but much of Crowe's and Guild's work continued into the 1940s until a rift between the two resulted in the temporary closure of the laboratory in 1949. Nearly 100 years after its founding, discoveries from the Johns Hopkins Otologic Research Laboratory remain relevant and emphasize the importance of continued human temporal bone research to improve our understanding and treatment of otologic disease.

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