| How the Ear Works - Nature's Solutions for Listening The Inner Ear Battery - The inner ear is divided into two fluid filled chambers - one inside the other. Figure 3 illustrates the basic organization of both the organs of hearing and balance. The fluid in the two chambers differs on the basis of the kind of salt that each contains. The fluid in the outer or bony chamber is filled with a sodium salt solution (called perilymph) that resembles the salt composition in the blood or the fluids found in the brain. The inner or membranous chamber is filled with a potassium salt solution (endolymph) that resembles the fluid that is normally found inside the cells of the body. The difference in concentration between the two chambers is maintained by specialized cells that line parts of the membranous chamber and "pump" potassium into the membranous chamber. The difference in the chemical composition of the these two fluids provides chemical energy (like a battery) that powers the activities of the sensory cells. This division of labor is unique to the inner ear because the function of the principal cells relies on chemical energy provided by other cells. In virtually all other systems, whether it is heart muscles, the brain, or the retina of the eye, the principal cells must combine nutrients and oxygen to produce the energy they use to perform their functions. In the inner ear, metabolic processes are performed by an organ called the stria vascularis located a half a millimeter from the hearing organ. The stria vascularis is essentially a battery whose electrical current powers hearing. It is powerful enough that if its power could be harnessed it could used instead of batteries for hearing aids. BCM Public | BCM Intranet | Privacy Notices | Contact BCM | BCM Site Map | ©2001-2065 Baylor College of Medicine
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