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  1. The purpose of the auditory ossicles (also called the ossicular chain) is to transmit sound via a chain reaction of vibrations that connects the eardrum to the inner ear and cochlea. Once the vibrations reach the cochlea, a hollow, snail-like chamber filled with fluid, they are translated into nerve impulses which the brain interprets as sound.

  2. Jul 5, 2023 · The incus (anvil) is the middle auditory ossicle. It is suspended medial to the malleus and lateral to the stapes and joins these ossicles together with synovial joints. It consists of the: body, short limb, long limb/process, and lenticular process. The body of the incus articulates with the head of the malleus anterolaterally.

    • Medical Content Validation
    • 13 min
    • Posterior aspect of the neck of the stapes
  3. Feb 24, 2024 · The middle ear (tympanic cavity) transmits sound energy from the external environment to the inner ear for auditory transduction. The auditory ossicles, malleus (hammer), incus (anvil), and stapes (stirrup) are critical to the middle ear's function. The malleus connects to the tympanic membrane and transfers auditory oscillations to the incus and then the stapes. The stapes connects to the ...

    • Tom George, Bruno Bordoni
    • 2024/02/24
    • 2021
  4. May 13, 2024 · Inner ear. The end of the ossicular chain, the stapes, moves sound waves through part of the inner ear called the oval window. The oval window is a membrane located at the end of the middle ear and at the entrance of the inner ear. The inner ear, called the cochlea, is a snail-shell-shaped organ filled with fluid and tiny hair cells.

  5. Your hearing process involves all of the auditory system parts mentioned above. Here’s a step-by-step guide to this complex process: Sound waves travel through your ear canal to your eardrum and cause it to vibrate. The vibrations travel from your eardrum to your ossicles (tiny bones in your middle ear). Your ossicles send the vibrations to ...

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  7. The sound waves then travel toward a flexible, oval membrane at the end of the ear canal called the eardrum, or tympanic membrane. Sound waves cause the eardrum to vibrate. The Middle Ear. The vibrations from the eardrum set the ossicles into motion. The ossicles are actually tiny bones — the smallest in the human body.