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A Morphological Study of Age Changes in Adult Human Auricular Cartilage With Special Emphasis on Elastic Fibers
Author(s) -
Ito Isamu,
Imada Masato,
Ikeda Minoru,
Sueno Kouhei,
Arikuni Tomio,
Kida Akinori
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1097/00005537-200105000-00023
Subject(s) - auricle , cartilage , medicine , anatomy , elastic fiber , age groups , perichondrium , homogeneous , human ear , matrix (chemical analysis) , pathology , materials science , composite material , physics , demography , sociology , acoustics , thermodynamics
Objective It is well known that the size of the human auricle increases after it has finished development. The reason why the size of the human auricle continues to enlarge until advanced age after reaching adulthood was investigated by observation of the ultrastructure of elastic fibers in human auricular cartilage. Methods A total of 1958 subjects (966 males and 992 females) were classified into 18 age groups from 0 to 5 years up to 85 years and above by 5‐year intervals. Ear length, ear width, and length of ear attachment were measured with calipers. Human auricular cartilage was obtained from 26 subjects (16 males and 10 females) aged 14 to 79 years, stained by orcein, and examined by light and electron microscopy. Results Each item of measurement of human auricular size increased significantly with age in both males and females. On morphological examination by light and electron microscopy after orcein staining, elastic fibers in the cartilage were almost homogeneous in diameter and surrounded the cartilage lacuna in bundle‐like fashion in young persons, whereas those in elderly persons were heterogeneous in thickness and had many fragments surrounding the territorial matrix. In elderly persons, collagen‐like fibers and small vesicles with heterogeneous electron density were frequently observed near elastic bundles around the territorial matrix. Conclusion Structural changes of auricular cartilage associated with morphological age changes of elastic fibers may be one of the causes of expansion of the auricle after reaching adulthood.

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