Episode: 2109 Title: HPR2109: Hacking my inner ear Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2109/hpr2109.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:24:35 --- This in HPR episode 2109 entitled Hacking Mytheria, it is hosted by Dave Morris and in about 15 minutes long, the summer is how I discovered some new things about how mytheria works and how to stop falling over. This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com, get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com. Hi everyone, this is Dave Morris, I'm going to do a slightly unusual show today or episode where we want to call it because we're very short of episodes in the queue. I'd had this one in my list of possible for over a year now and I'd more or less just missed it as not being appropriate but given that we're quite desperate, you're going to get it. So what I'm talking about today is I've entitled anyway Hacking Mytheria. So I'm seeing it as a bit of a hacking exercise you decide whether you agree or not. What motivated me to do this was in April 2015 I suddenly found myself getting really dizzy as I've bent down when I was having a shower actually and I pretty much fell over as a consequence. Just about managed to save myself and didn't hit my head on the wall or something scared me. I meant to see a doctor but since it was a weekend I got a sort of emergency guy and he wasn't really able to diagnose it. Within a day or so a medical student I know, I don't think I'm allowed to tell you who it was but that medical student is now fully qualified doctor and is doing her foundation training in various hospitals and so on. She suggested that it might be something called BPPV which stands for benign, paroxysmal, positional vertigo and with that in mind I researched and found out a lot more about it and got myself a cure. Now, first of all, apologies because I'm going to be talking about a certain number of medically technical things. Try to keep that to a minimum. Secondly, disclaimer, I'm not medically trained. Just an interest as observer happens to have a science education, got a degree in biology so the stuff I'm going to talk about if you experience any of it yourself then seek medical advice. You need to find out whether it actually is BPPV or something else and you need to get qualified assistants to deal with it. So let's talk a bit about the human inner ear or actually the mammalian in it because they're pretty similar across all mammals I believe. As a young student I was not sure whether I wanted to go into biology or medicine. I quite fancied the idea of medicine but I wasn't quite sure that I had the, I don't know really, I was brave enough to do it I suppose. I'm sad I didn't make that choice but they go. But at that point I got very interested in the structure of the human inner ear and studied it quite a lot as I was preparing for my A level zoology examination. It was on the curriculum but I went into much more detail than was necessary. I got a question on it in the A level exam and was able to write a lot. In fact I had to control myself otherwise I've been writing you know on that for the entire time. I got a a good mark as a consequence I'm pretty certain. So the human inner ear performs two major functions. It's got a thing called the cochlear which is the bit that handles hearing. It's a bit of a simplification but forgive me I'm sure. And the other bit is called the vestibular system and it's concerned with balance. So I'll skip over the hearing bit in this episode. It's really fascinating. I'm amazed how it works. I'd love to talk about it but it's probably not on on the HPR. As a tinnitus sufferer I get whistling in my ears. It's fascinating how it malfunctions as you get older as well. I'm going to concentrate on the vestibular system and in order to give you some sort of insight into the BPPV condition. So I put a diagram in my long notes as long notes for this because otherwise it would be too long for the RSS feed. Many of the texts that you look at and the ones I looked at when I was studying this back in the 70s show pictures of a structure with the curly cochlear and the the semi-circular canals and stuff. You'd get the impression from that that there is a sort of thing you can take out of a of a skull which is this structure. It's not true. What it's actually showing is a series of cavities within the sort of solid bone, the temporal bone of the skull. So it's tubes. It's not a structure that you can remove per se. That's my understanding. I've never dissected a human head. They're dissected a number of other heads and I don't believe. We didn't look at that particularly, but anyway, various cavities and passages that make up this structure are fluid filled with fluid called perilymph which is worth mentioning because it's part of the cerebral spinal fluid that is in your spine and around the in your skull and both brain. And inside each of the tubes there's a membranous tube or membranous structures that many of them are tubes which is filled with another fluid called endolymph. The balance system is a fairly chunky looking chamber called a vestibule and connected to it. As you can see in the picture hopefully, there are three semicircular canals. The canals are oriented at right angles to each other and are responsible for sensing rotational movement of the head and I put down here pitch roll and yore because if you understand those terms in the sense of flying a plane or a modern plane or something, it's the sort of X, Y and Z axis rotation. Now there are five sensory areas in this structure, in the vestibular structure and each of the semicircular canals has a enlarged region which you can see in the picture which is called the ampulla and in there is a collection of sensory cells that detect the movement of the internal fluid, the endolymph and the the movements caused by head rotation. There are two other sensory structures in the vestibule called and sorry about these names, the sacuille and the utricle and they detect head position, not so much the movement but the position in relation to gravity. So this is relevant in the context of this disorder. Now the senses in the vestibule, this succulent utricle, are different from the others in that they have calcium carbonate crystals attached to them on the top and these are verishly called otoliths which means earstone, otoconia, I don't know, I can't pass that one, statoconia is the other name, I didn't look up the Latin of those, I know lithamine stone and otore relates to ear. Anyway they're acted on by gravity, the weight of these little crystals are acted on by gravity and they trigger these sense cells to tell you brain what orientation your head is in. Now here's the important part, it's actually very complicated if you want to look at the way it's all structured together but I'm trying to simplify it to some degree but one of the things I think it's quite important is that the utricle is in the part of the inner ear which is connected to the semicircular canals. The sacuille on the other hand is in a different part of the structure, it's not connected. So let's talk about BPPV. What happens in this condition is that otoliths become dislodged from the utricle. Remember it's connected to the semicircular canals and it migrates it or they migrate into the semicircular canals and there they disrupt the normal process of sensing head rotation and that's where the vertigo, the dizziness comes from. Now the detachment of otoliths can be caused by head injury but it also happens spontaneously as you get older. I'm older therefore it happens spontaneously. Now the BPPV business and I'll try not to use the full thing but I thought you might find it useful like explain what it actually means benign. The first word is means that it's not a threat to health it's something that's an useless more than anything else. Paracysmol is a word, a medicines full of these things. It a paracysm is a is a brief event in these terms or paracysmol because it occurs in short bursts and it's positional because it happens when you change your head position in particular ways and the vertigo bit is because it results in this dizziness or a spinning sensation. So in my experience there are two common conditions that will trigger about of BPPV and it's things like suddenly bending down or lifting your head up to look up or turning over in bed. Turning over in bed is the worst one in my experience anyway. So talk about the semi-circular canals. They detect head rotation by the movement of the endolimp fluid across sensory cells in the ampulli. When the head is moved the fluid lags behind because of inertia so you know you suddenly move quickly with a cup of tea and it spills out of the cup because it doesn't want to move rapidly as you do. So this fluid movement causes bending of the hairs of these sensory cells. They're all the sensory cells are all structures that have sort of hair like structure within them which when they are flexed causes a signal that goes goes along the nerve. The fluid once it's lagged a bit the fluid catches up the movement and then things stabilize but that process of moving from still to moving is the process of acceleration and these things detect and they detect which direction it is by virtue of which one triggers. The dizziness is actually caused by the fluid movement or the sensor cells themselves being affected by the loose otoliths. Remember we've now got crystals moving around in the fluid whereas it's designed in quotes to just have fluid moving around. So this can change the way in which the fluid moves because there's more mass in there or they can actually stick to the sensor cells themselves and cause that whole mechanism to work differently. So these changes in the normal behavior of this sensing system causes sensation of movement when there is none. The other thing is that normally when you rotate your head your eyes automatically compensate. They do a thing called nistagmas which is they try to keep distant images in sight so as you move your head you don't lose sight of things that might be important that leopard about to leap on you or something like that. So during the BPPV where your head's not actually moving but you think it is then the rotational movement signals are received in the eyes moves if they would if the rotation was real and this so-called nistagmas is a diagnostic feature of BPPV. So let's talk about treatment then. So I read up about this stuff at the time when I experienced it. I found there were a number of procedures that are used to diagnose and treat BPPV. The simplest form of treatment consists of head movements designed to move the displaced otoliths from the semi-circular canal back into the vestibule where we won't do any harm. I don't know what happens to them once they've got back into the vestibule. I've seen some indications that they might be reabsorbed in some way but this sort of information is not easily available and I'm not digging down deep into the medical stuff I'm afraid. Anyway I found a method which is called the Eppley maneuver. But before this maneuver can be used at least effectively, you need to know where the otoliths are. So it's probably only likely to be one ear for example and getting some idea which of the semi-circular canals as effective is also quite useful. Well I worked this out by guesswork largely. This is why I wouldn't recommend you doing this yourself if you experienced this thing. In fact the direction of the nystagmus indicates which ear is affected but doing your own nystagmus diagnosis is not easy. I sort of guessed I thought that it was in I forget which ear right here and so I worked on that principle. The severity of the BPPVR had was fairly mild. I just had the dizziness and I managed to after having been caught unawares by it in the first instance I was able to deal with it pretty well. Some people do actually they just sort of live with it and it will sometimes correct itself because you've got this thing moving around inside the canals of the ear. Sometimes they'll fall out of their own cord. Anyway I found the aptly manoeuvre and gave it a try and found that it actually worked for me. I just tried it once and it worked and I haven't had the problem since. Now I pointed at some details of all of this stuff. If you go and look on Wikipedia you can find a complex comprehensive description of BPPV and if you want to dig deeper into the structure of the inner ear I've put some article pointers particularly to the vestibule and the semicircular canals. It looks like just about every other word in these things is linked to something else where you can drill right down into the minute detail if you really want to. I have done so but I'm not not going to share that with you because I'm sure you won't want to know. I also put some stuff in about the aptly manoeuvre which there's Wikipedia article about it and about Dr. Eppley himself and his discovery of this creation invention of this manoeuvre. I find the YouTube animation that I've pointed to I think actually explains things really well. Not quite as much detail as I've done here but hopefully you know if you have this issue or you know somebody who has you might find that a useful thing to check out but that was the process I actually used. There are there are others as I say it's the one I used and that was the thing that seemed to give me relief. So in ending I'll just say that I guess that I managed to hack my own inner ear but it was more by luck than anything else. Okay that's it bye now. You've been listening to heckaPublicRadio at heckaPublicRadio.org. 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