Home

ossiculair

Ossiculair, in Dutch usage, refers to the ossicles of the middle ear, the three tiny bones that form the ossicular chain: the malleus (hammer), incus (anvil), and stapes (stirrup). These bones reside in the middle ear cavity between the tympanic membrane and the inner ear’s cochlea. The malleus connects to the eardrum, the malleus articulates with the incus, and the incus articulates with the stapes. The chain is stabilized by ligaments and is supplied by two small muscles, the tensor tympani and stapedius, which can modulate movement to protect the inner ear.

The primary function of the ossicular system is to transmit sound vibrations from the eardrum to the

Developmentally, the ossicles originate from the pharyngeal arches: the malleus and incus derive mainly from Meckel’s

Clinically, disorders of the ossicular chain can cause conductive hearing loss. Trauma, chronic otitis media, or

Ossiculair terminology is used to describe these middle-ear bones and their functional system, commonly referred to

inner
ear
while
providing
impedance
matching
between
air
and
the
fluid-filled
cochlea.
Through
lever
action
and
area
transformation,
the
ossicles
increase
the
pressure
transmitted
to
the
oval
window,
facilitating
efficient
hearing.
cartilage
of
the
first
arch,
while
the
stapes
arises
from
Reichert’s
cartilage
of
the
second
arch.
They
ossify
and
migrate
to
the
middle
ear
during
fetal
development.
conditions
such
as
otosclerosis
(stapes
footplate
fixation)
can
impair
transmission.
Treatments
include
ossiculoplasty
or
stapedectomy,
often
with
prosthetic
devices,
to
restore
movement
and
sound
transmission.
in
English
as
the
ossicular
chain
or
ossicles.