audiometry (impedance)
Last reviewed 03/2023
Tympanometry:
- the tympanometer (handheld or desktop)
- is a useful, affordable diagnostic tool in general practice (1)
- is a device that provides quantitative information on the function of structures and the presence of fluid in the middle ear
- the tympanogram is the graphic display of this data (1)
- this provides useful quantitative information about
the following (1):
- presence of fluid in the middle ear
- mobility of the middle ear system
- ear canal volume
- its uses include
- the evaluation of otitis media with effusion and to a lesser extent in acute otitis media (1)
- to assess middle ear compliance or to assess nerve deafness in children
- it provides a convenient method for screening children for glue ear.
- it is based upon two principles:
- when sound energy passes down the ear canal, some will be absorbed by the eardrum and some will be reflected back
- the proportion of the sound reflected will increase as the pressure in the middle ear falls and the ear drum is stiffened
- a tympanogram is constructed by altering the pressure in the external auditory meatus and at each setting, passing sound to the ear and measuring the sound energy reflected. A three channel tympanometer is used - with separate channels for each function.
- a pneumatic otoscopic examination of the tympanic membrane should be done prior to tympanometry (1)
Reference: