1. Tympanometry using a sweep-frequency probe tone and its clinical evaluation.
- Author
-
Funasaka S and Kumakawa K
- Subjects
- Ear Diseases physiopathology, Ear Ossicles physiopathology, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Humans, Pressure, Sound, Acoustic Impedance Tests methods
- Abstract
In this new tympanometric system, air pressure in the external meatus is kept constant at either -200 daPa or 0 daPa. The frequency of the probe tone is swept from 220 to 2,000 Hz (or 2,500 Hz, if necessary) in 4 s. During this frequency sweep, sound pressure in decibels and phase angle in degrees in the external meatus are sampled and the differences in sound pressure and phase angle measured at -200 and 0 daPa pressures are computed. These results are figured as a frequency-sound pressure curve and a frequency-phase angle curve. From the study on 8 fresh human cadaver temporal bones, four parameters in these curves are selected by discriminant analysis to provide diagnostic criteria: the minimum value and the 0-cross frequency of the frequency-sound pressure curve and the maximum value and its frequency of the frequency-phase angle curve. Normal parameters were determined in 50 normal ears. Evaluation of 40 patients with ossicular disorders revealed that 10 out of 12 cases of ossicular discontinuity and 5 out of 6 cases of malleus and/or incus fixation were correctly diagnosed. For stapes fixation, the diagnosis was correct in 12 out of 22 ears. This system is useful in the clinical diagnosis of ossicular disorders, producing a collection of curves and parameters that are distinctively different for the ossicular discontinuity and the ossicular fixation.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF