Abstract

Although it seems likely that body tilt or surgically provoked variations in intracranial pressure (ICP) can result in variations of intralabyrinthine pressure, the channels for pressure transmission remain controversial and the reasons why evoked otoacoustic emissions (EOAEs) exhibit attendant modifications are unclear. The theoretical framework implemented in the companion paper [Avan et al. part I, 2000] provides sensitive and non-invasive means to identify the middle-ear mechanism(s) entailed in EOAE changes. It was thus applied to analyze the influence of posture on EOAE phases and magnitudes as a function of frequency, in a series of experiments involving body tilt from sitting to supine (0° or −30°). Controlled ICP variations were surgically carried out in a series of hydrocephalic patients and the resulting EOAE changes were compared to posture data and model predictions. In all cases, the EOAE changes closely resembled those due to an increase in the stiffness of the stapes’ annular ligament, in keeping with the assumption that ICP gets transmitted to intralabyrinthine spaces and modifies the hydrostatic load on the stapes, thereby influencing EOAE features. A small additional contribution of middle-ear pressure to EOAE changes was identified in addition to the main stapes component. Dynamical EOAE measurements showed that sudden ICP changes were transmitted to the inner ear within 8–30 s. The high sensitivity of EOAE phases below 2 kHz to ICP changes, together with the absence of any significant confounding middle-ear effect, favors EOAEs for a reliable non-invasive monitoring of ICP and intralabyrinthine pressures.

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