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partial or total inability to hear. The two principal types of deafness are conduction deafness and nerve deafness. In conduction deafness, there is interruption of the sound vibrations in their passage from the outer world to the nerve cells in the inner ear. The obstacle may be earwax that blocks the external auditory channel, or stapes fixation, which prevents the stapes (one of the minute bones in the middle ear) from transmitting sound vibrations to the inner ear. In nerve deafness, some defect in the sensory cells of the inner ear (e.g., their injury by excessive noise) or in the vestibulocochlear nerve prevents transmission of sound impulses from the inner ear to the auditory centre in the brain. Deafness at birth is nearly always of the nerve type and cannot be improved by medical means.

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11y ago

To understand this difference, you first must have a basic knowledge of the human ear, and how it is organized. There are 3 main parts of the human ear: the outer ear (or ear canal), the middle ear, and the inner ear (or the cochlea). The outer ear is responsible for catching sound, and funneling it into the middle ear space. The middle ear is the space with 3 tiny bones that move back and forth together to send vibrations of sound to the inner ear. The inner ear is a snail shaped organ filled with fluid. When the middle ear transfers energy caused by sound to the inner ear, it creates waves in the inner ear’s fluid. The waves in the fluid move cause movement in tiny hair cells (found inside this fluid) that are connected to our auditory nerve. When these hair cells are moved around, they signal our brain to sound.

A conductive hearing loss is one that blocks conduction of auditory signal. This could be caused by any disease or disorder that blocks sound at the level of the outer or middle ear, and essentially acts as an ear plug. Ear infections, fluid in the ear, tumors, growths, scarring, or ear malformations are all different things that can cause conductive hearing loss.

A sensorineural hearing loss on the other hand is a hearing loss caused by damage to the cells within the cochlea (inner ear). In the case of sensorineural hearing loss, the sound may be conducted appropriately from the environment, to the outer, middle and inner ear, but the hair cells are not appropriately triggered. This is usually a result of death or damage to the hair cells of the cochlea, and may be caused by ototoxicity (chemical/drug damage to the cells), loud noise exposure, or simply cell death due to hearing loss (presbycusis).

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Q: What is the difference between conduction deafness and nerve deafness?
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Related questions

Where does nerve conduction deafness occur?

Nerve conduction deafness is one of the two types of deafness that can happen. It occurs when there is a break in communication between the nerve cells and the inner ear.


Can conduction deafness result from a lesion on the cochlear nerve?

Yes the result from a lesion on the cochlear nerve is sensorineural deafness. The result from the fusion of the ossicles is conduction deafness.


Is total nerve deafness correctable with hearing aids?

No, only conduction deafness is correctable with hearing aids


Explain the difference between conductive and nerve deafness?

Conductive deafness is caused by the bones in the middle ear to pass on sound vibrations to the inner ear. Nerve deafness may be caused by a disease or some other event that injures the cochlear nerve.


What type of deafness can result from the fusion of the ossicles?

Conduction deafness can be a direct result of the fusion of any or all of the three ossicles of the middle ear. If the ossicles cannot transmit sound vibrations properly, then they will not be received by the oval window to be transmitted to the inner ear.


What is the relationship between size of nerve and conduction velocity?

For unmyelinated nerves there is a relationship between axon diameter and conduction velocity. Larger diameter nerves conduct faster. For myelinated nerves the a larger diameter nerve will conduct faster between the nodes of ranvier where the action potential is propagated. Conduction is said to be saltatoryas it jumps from node to node.


Which of these is an example of nerve deafness?

tinnitus


What is the difference between the contour and magnitude of single nerve fiber and nerve trunk?

What is the difference between the contour and magnitude of single nerve fiber and nerve trunk?


What do nerve conduction velocity studies?

Nerve conduction velocity studies (NCV) are used to measure the speed with which an electrical signal is transferred along the nerve.


What is the difference between nerve cells and nerve?

a nerve tends to refer to a group of nerve cells.


Which nerve is used for hearing?

Vestibulocochlear (CN 8). Damage to this nerve can cause tinnitus (deafness).


What is a common cause of nerve deafness?

exposure to loud sounds