Description of the ear canal's geometry is essential for describing peripheral sound flow, yet physical measurements of the canal's geometry are lacking and recent measurements suggest that older-adult-canal areas are systematically larger than previously assumed. Methods to measure ear-canal geometry from multi-planar reconstructions of high-resolution CT images were developed and applied to 66 ears from 47 subjects, ages 18-90 years. The canal's termination, central axis, entrance, and first bend were identified based on objective definitions, and the canal's cross-sectional area was measured along its canal's central axis in 1-2 mm increments. In general, left and right ears from a given subject were far more similar than measurements across subjects, where areas varied by factors of 2-3 at many locations. The canal areas varied systematically with age cohort at the first-bend location, where canal-based measurement probes likely sit; young adults (18-30 years) had an average area of 44mm whereas older adults (61-90 years) had a significantly larger average area of 69mm. Across all subjects ages 18-90, measured means ± standard deviations included: canals termination area at the tympanic annulus 56±8mm; area at the canal's first bend 53±18mm; area at the canal's entrance 97±24mm; and canal length 31.4±3.1mm.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10219681PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2023.108782DOI Listing

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