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Using volumetric optical coherence tomography to achieve spatially resolved organ of Corti vibration measurements

Brian L. Frost, C. Elliott Strimbu, Elizabeth S. Olson

2022The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has become a powerful tool for measuring vibrations within the organ of Corti complex (OCC) in cochlear mechanics experiments. However, the one-dimensional nature of OCT measurements, combined with experimental and anatomical constraints, make these data ambiguous: Both the relative positions of measured structures and their orientation relative to the direction of measured vibrations are not known a priori. We present a method by which these measurement features can be determined via the use of a volumetric OCT scan to determine the relationship between the imaging/measurement axes and the canonical anatomical axes. We provide evidence that the method is functional by replicating previously measured radial vibration patterns of the basilar membrane (BM). We used the method to compare outer hair cell and BM vibration phase in the same anatomical cross section (but different optical cross sections), and found that outer hair cell region vibrations lead those of the BM across the entire measured frequency range. In contrast, a phase lead is only present at low frequencies in measurements taken within a single optical cross section. Relative phase is critical to the workings of the cochlea, and these results emphasize the importance of anatomically oriented measurement and analysis.

Topics & Concepts

Organ of CortiOptical coherence tomographyBasilar membraneVibrationAcousticsTomographyCochleaPhysicsPhase (matter)Relative phaseHair cellOpticsMaterials scienceAnatomyBiologyQuantum mechanicsHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, GeneticsHearing Loss and RehabilitationOptical Coherence Tomography Applications
Using volumetric optical coherence tomography to achieve spatially resolved organ of Corti vibration measurements | Litcius