3 research outputs found

    Pulsatile tympanic membrane displacement is associated with cognitive score in healthy subjects

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    To test the hypothesis that pulsing of intracranial pressure has an association with cognition, we measured cognitive score and pulsing of the tympanic membrane in 290 healthy subjects. This hypothesis was formed on the assumptions that large intracranial pressure pulses impair cognitive performance and tympanic membrane pulses reflect intracranial pressure pulses. 290 healthy subjects, aged 20–80 years, completed the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Test. Spontaneous tympanic membrane displacement during a heart cycle was measured from both ears in the sitting and supine position. We applied multiple linear regression, correcting for age, heart rate, and height, to test for an association between cognitive score and spontaneous tympanic membrane displacement. Significance was set at P < 0.0125 (Bonferroni correction.) A significant association was seen in the left supine position (p = 0.0076.) The association was not significant in the right ear supine (p = 0.28) or in either ear while sitting. Sub-domains of the cognitive assessment revealed that executive function, language and memory have been primarily responsible for this association. In conclusion, we have found that spontaneous pulses of the tympanic membrane are associated with cognitive performance and believe this reflects an association between cognitive performance and intracranial pressure pulses

    Reference intervals for the evoked tympanic membrane displacement measurement: a non-invasive measure of intracranial pressure

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    OBJECTIVE: Evoked tympanic membrane displacement (TMD) is a non-invasive technique for assessing intracranial pressure (ICP). The aim of this study was to define reference intervals (RIs) in the healthy population.APPROACH: Measurements were made in 154 healthy adults. Results were quantified by V m, which is the most frequently described TMD measurement. Distributions were determined for sitting and supine posture. Differences between right and left ears were explored using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Postural changes were used to assess pressure transfer between the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) and the perilymph.MAIN RESULTS: The range in which 95% of scores fall is  -283 to 722 nl (M  =  132 nl) left sitting, -232 to 623 nl (M  =  97 nl) right sitting, -543 to 717 nl (M  =  37 nl) left supine and  -584 to 504 nl (M  =  -15 nl) right supine. No significant difference was seen between the left and right ears in the sitting position; a significant difference was seen in the supine position. A significant effect of posture was seen for both the left and right ears. Postural changes indicated pressure transfer between the CSF and perilymph more often in the right ear (75.3%) than the left (61.9%). Pressure transfer could not be assumed in either ear for 13.4% of participants.SIGNIFICANCE: We present the largest dataset of evoked TMD in healthy individuals and the first set of RIs for V m. A patient cohort with both invasive ICP and evoked TMD measurements is needed to validate the technique for clinical use.</p

    Does the variability of evoked tympanic membrane displacement data (V<sub>m</sub>) increase as the magnitude of the pulse amplitude increases?

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    Objectives: Evoked tympanic membrane displacement (TMD) measurements, quantified by Vm, record small volume changes in the ear canal following stimulation of the acoustic reflex. Vm shows a correlation with intracranial pressure (ICP) and has been proposed as an option to non-invasively measure ICP. The spontaneous pulsing of the tympanic membrane, driven by the cardiovascular pulse, may contaminate the recordings and contribute to high measurement variability in some subjects. This study hypothesised that the larger the spontaneous vascular pulse, the larger the variability in Vm. Materials and methods: Spontaneous and evoked TMD data from each ear in the sitting and supine position were recorded from 100 healthy volunteers using the MMS-14 CCFP analyser. ECG was also recorded to identify each heartbeat. Using bespoke software written in Matlab, spontaneous data were analysed to produce average pulse amplitude (PA) waveforms and evoked data were analysed to calculate average Vm and its standard deviation. Averaged spontaneous PA was plotted against Vm variability and Pearson’s correlation coefficient was calculated to test for a significant linear relationship. Results: There was a strong positive correlation between PA and Vm variability in all conditions: left sitting, r = 0.758; left supine, r = 0.665; right sitting, r = 0.755; right supine, r = 0.513. All were significant at p &lt; 0.001. Conclusion: This study shows that large Vm variability is associated with a large spontaneous vascular pulse. This suggests that efforts to reduce vascular pulsing from recordings, either by a subtraction technique during post-processing or ECG-gating of the evoking stimulus, may improve reliability of the Vm measurement.</p
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