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Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone

Stable posture and body movement in humans is dictated by the precise functioning of the ampulla organs in the semi-circular canals. Statistical analysis of the interrelationship between bony and membranous compartments within the semi-circular canals is dependent on the visualization of soft tissue...

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Autores principales: Johnson Chacko, Lejo, Schmidbauer, Dominik T., Handschuh, Stephan, Reka, Alen, Fritscher, Karl D., Raudaschl, Patrik, Saba, Rami, Handler, Michael, Schier, Peter P., Baumgarten, Daniel, Fischer, Natalie, Pechriggl, Elisabeth J., Brenner, Erich, Hoermann, Romed, Glueckert, Rudolf, Schrott-Fischer, Anneliese
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5834493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29535601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00107
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author Johnson Chacko, Lejo
Schmidbauer, Dominik T.
Handschuh, Stephan
Reka, Alen
Fritscher, Karl D.
Raudaschl, Patrik
Saba, Rami
Handler, Michael
Schier, Peter P.
Baumgarten, Daniel
Fischer, Natalie
Pechriggl, Elisabeth J.
Brenner, Erich
Hoermann, Romed
Glueckert, Rudolf
Schrott-Fischer, Anneliese
author_facet Johnson Chacko, Lejo
Schmidbauer, Dominik T.
Handschuh, Stephan
Reka, Alen
Fritscher, Karl D.
Raudaschl, Patrik
Saba, Rami
Handler, Michael
Schier, Peter P.
Baumgarten, Daniel
Fischer, Natalie
Pechriggl, Elisabeth J.
Brenner, Erich
Hoermann, Romed
Glueckert, Rudolf
Schrott-Fischer, Anneliese
author_sort Johnson Chacko, Lejo
collection PubMed
description Stable posture and body movement in humans is dictated by the precise functioning of the ampulla organs in the semi-circular canals. Statistical analysis of the interrelationship between bony and membranous compartments within the semi-circular canals is dependent on the visualization of soft tissue structures. Thirty-one human inner ears were prepared, post-fixed with osmium tetroxide and decalcified for soft tissue contrast enhancement. High resolution X-ray microtomography images at 15 μm voxel-size were manually segmented. This data served as templates for centerline generation and cross-sectional area extraction. Our estimates demonstrate the variability of individual specimens from averaged centerlines of both bony and membranous labyrinth. Centerline lengths and cross-sectional areas along these lines were identified from segmented data. Using centerlines weighted by the inverse squares of the cross-sectional areas, plane angles could be quantified. The fit planes indicate that the bony labyrinth resembles a Cartesian coordinate system more closely than the membranous labyrinth. A widening in the membranous labyrinth of the lateral semi-circular canal was observed in some of the specimens. Likewise, the cross-sectional areas in the perilymphatic spaces of the lateral canal differed from the other canals. For the first time we could precisely describe the geometry of the human membranous labyrinth based on a large sample size. Awareness of the variations in the canal geometry of the membranous and bony labyrinth would be a helpful reference in designing electrodes for future vestibular prosthesis and simulating fluid dynamics more precisely.
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spelling pubmed-58344932018-03-13 Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone Johnson Chacko, Lejo Schmidbauer, Dominik T. Handschuh, Stephan Reka, Alen Fritscher, Karl D. Raudaschl, Patrik Saba, Rami Handler, Michael Schier, Peter P. Baumgarten, Daniel Fischer, Natalie Pechriggl, Elisabeth J. Brenner, Erich Hoermann, Romed Glueckert, Rudolf Schrott-Fischer, Anneliese Front Neurosci Neuroscience Stable posture and body movement in humans is dictated by the precise functioning of the ampulla organs in the semi-circular canals. Statistical analysis of the interrelationship between bony and membranous compartments within the semi-circular canals is dependent on the visualization of soft tissue structures. Thirty-one human inner ears were prepared, post-fixed with osmium tetroxide and decalcified for soft tissue contrast enhancement. High resolution X-ray microtomography images at 15 μm voxel-size were manually segmented. This data served as templates for centerline generation and cross-sectional area extraction. Our estimates demonstrate the variability of individual specimens from averaged centerlines of both bony and membranous labyrinth. Centerline lengths and cross-sectional areas along these lines were identified from segmented data. Using centerlines weighted by the inverse squares of the cross-sectional areas, plane angles could be quantified. The fit planes indicate that the bony labyrinth resembles a Cartesian coordinate system more closely than the membranous labyrinth. A widening in the membranous labyrinth of the lateral semi-circular canal was observed in some of the specimens. Likewise, the cross-sectional areas in the perilymphatic spaces of the lateral canal differed from the other canals. For the first time we could precisely describe the geometry of the human membranous labyrinth based on a large sample size. Awareness of the variations in the canal geometry of the membranous and bony labyrinth would be a helpful reference in designing electrodes for future vestibular prosthesis and simulating fluid dynamics more precisely. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5834493/ /pubmed/29535601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00107 Text en Copyright © 2018 Johnson Chacko, Schmidbauer, Handschuh, Reka, Fritscher, Raudaschl, Saba, Handler, Schier, Baumgarten, Fischer, Pechriggl, Brenner, Hoermann, Glueckert and Schrott-Fischer. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Johnson Chacko, Lejo
Schmidbauer, Dominik T.
Handschuh, Stephan
Reka, Alen
Fritscher, Karl D.
Raudaschl, Patrik
Saba, Rami
Handler, Michael
Schier, Peter P.
Baumgarten, Daniel
Fischer, Natalie
Pechriggl, Elisabeth J.
Brenner, Erich
Hoermann, Romed
Glueckert, Rudolf
Schrott-Fischer, Anneliese
Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title_full Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title_fullStr Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title_short Analysis of Vestibular Labyrinthine Geometry and Variation in the Human Temporal Bone
title_sort analysis of vestibular labyrinthine geometry and variation in the human temporal bone
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5834493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29535601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00107
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