Is the Cochlear Amplifier a Fluid Pump?
Abstract
We have visualized and quantified the effects of electrically evoked motility of outer hair cells (OHCs) within the organ of Corti using an excised cochlear preparation. We found that OHC motility induces oscillatory fluid flow in the tunnel of Corti (TC) and this flow is present at physiologically relevant frequencies. We also show, using a simple one-dimensional hydromechanical model of the TC, that a fluid wave within the tunnel can travel without significant attenuation for distances larger than the wavelength of the cochlear traveling wave. These results in combination with a recent hypothesis that fluid flow within the tunnel is necessary for cochlear amplification suggest that the function of the OHCs is to act as a fluid pump.
- Publication:
-
Biophysics of the Cochlea. From Molecules to Models
- Pub Date:
- February 2003
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2003bcmm.conf..310K