Abstract
The results of startle and acoustic stapedius reflex measurements can be used to subclassify various types of fixation of the ossicular chain. Reflex measurements were performed on a group of subjects with normal hearing and on a group of patients with surgically verified ossicular chain fixation. In 97% of the subjects with normal hearing (n = 30), reproducible impedance changes were observed as part of a startle reaction and four different reaction patterns could be distinguished. In a subgroup of subjects with normal hearing who had a relatively, statistically significant, high acoustic reflex threshold, a characteristic response was found which was most probably caused by contraction of the tensor tympani muscle only. The same response was detected in 77% of the patients (n = 22) with otosclerosis. In the remaining 23%, no middle ear impedance changes occurred as part of a startle reaction. In five out of six patients with fixation of the malleus, no response was observed. Although the startle reflex measurement is a valuable tool for distinguishing between stapes fixation and multiple ossicular chain fixations, the results are not conclusive.