trumhåla
Trumhåla, or tympanic cavity, is an air-filled space within the temporal bone that forms part of the middle ear. It lies medial to the tympanic membrane and lateral to the inner ear, and it functions as a conduit for sound from the eardrum to the inner ear. The cavity communicates with the nasopharynx through the auditory (Eustachian) tube and with the mastoid air cell system via the aditus to the mastoid antrum.
Anatomically, the tympanic cavity is divided into two main regions: the tympanic cavity proper and the epitympanic
The cavity contains the auditory ossicles—the malleus (hammer), incus (anvil), and stapes (stirrup)—which form the chain
Innervation of the tympanic cavity mucosa is provided by the tympanic plexus, formed in part by tympanic
Clinically, the tympanic cavity is central to otitis media and other middle-ear disorders, which can affect