Earlobe Explained

Earlobe
Latin:lobulus auriculae (singular), lobuli auricularum (plural)
French:lobe d'oreille -->
Width:120
System:Auditory system

The human earlobe (lobulus auriculae), the lower portion of the outer ear, is composed of tough areolar and adipose connective tissues, lacking the firmness and elasticity of the rest of the auricle (the external structure of the ear). In some cases the lower lobe is connected to the side of the face. Since the earlobe does not contain cartilage[1] it has a large blood supply and may help to warm the ears and maintain balance. However, earlobes are not generally considered to have any major biological function.[2] The earlobe contains many nerve endings, and for some people is an erogenous zone.

The zoologist Desmond Morris in his book The Naked Ape (1967) conjectured that the lobes developed as an additional erogenous zone to facilitate the extended sexuality necessary in the evolution of human monogamous pair bonding.[3]

Organogenesis

The earlobe, as a body part built of epithelium and connective tissue, might appear to be derived from dermatome. But this is not the case, as in the surrounding tissue there are no somites and thus no dermatome. In this area, the dermis is derived from cells of mesenchymal cells: the mesenchyme is derived from the sclerotome and splanchnopleura located in the nearby regions of the torso.

The earlobe as a body part arises and develops in the vicinity of auricular follicle, as a result of cascade induction:

  1. The first-level inductor is the central segment of Archenteron's roof, which induces the production of the Medulla oblongata (part of the Hindbrain).
  2. The second-level inductor is the Medulla oblongata, which induces the production of a pair of auricular follicles derived from the mesoderm.
  3. The third-level inductor is the auricular follicle, which induces the production of the auditory bulla.

Genetics

Earlobes average about 2 centimeters long, and elongate slightly with age.[4] Although the "free" vs. "attached" appearance of earlobes is often presented as an example of a simple "one gene – two alleles" Mendelian trait in humans, earlobes do not all fall neatly into either category; there is a continuous range from one extreme to the other, suggesting the influence of several genes.[5] [6] [7]

Recessive gene frequency in the selected worldwide populations
PopulationNRecessive gene frequency
(for attached ear lobes)
Source
Africans?0.60Messeri (1976)[8]
Afroamericans2420.56Glass et al. (1952)[9]
Ainu?0.49Messeri (1967)
Babinga ?0.87Messeri (1967)
Bavaria?0.84Messeri (1967)
Bosnia and Herzegovina7,3250.55Hadžiselimović (1981)[10]
Brazil?0.34Saldanha (1960)[11]
Cameroon ?0.83Messeri (1967)
Canadian Aboriginals5320.68Chaison (1963)[12]
China?0.62Messeri (1967)
Hong Kong700.80Lai, Walsh (1966)[13]
India: Bengal1000.49Dutta (1963)[14]
Japan700.82Lai, Walsh (1966)
Laponia?0.71Messeri (1967)
Micronesia?0.52Messeri (1967)
Nepal1690.66Bhasin (1969)[15]
New Guinea3990.80Lai, Walsh (1966)
Nicobar8130.81Gabel (1958)[16]
Papuans?0.54Messeri (1967)
Polynesia?0.39Messeri (1967)
Russia?0.59Messeri (1967)
Sardinia 4030.53Messeri (1967)
Scotland5000.48Chattopadhyay (1968)[17]
Somalia?0.42Messeri (1967)
Sweden2470.59Wiener (1937)[18]
Tibet?0.68Tiwari, Bhasin (1969)[19]
United States: Baltimore 3800.63Glass et al. (1952)
United States: Brooklyn 2480.92Wiener (1937)
United States: Buffalo 3810.43Dronamraju (1966)[20]
United States: Pennsylvania2410.50Glass et al. (1952)

Clinical issues

Earlobes are normally smooth, but occasionally exhibit creases. Creased earlobes are sometimes associated with genetic disorders in children, including Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. In some early studies, earlobe creases were thought to be associated with an increased risk of heart attack and coronary heart disease. But more recent studies have concluded that, since earlobes become more creased with age, and older people are more likely to have heart disease than younger people, age rather than intrinsic factors may account for the findings linking heart attack to earlobe creases. The earlobe crease is also called Frank's Sign.

Society and culture

Earlobe piercing and stretching

Piercing the earlobes is a commonplace activity in many cultures in many historical eras; no other location on the body is as commonly pierced. Consequently, injury to the earlobe due to the weight of heavy earrings is also common.[21] Some cultures practice earlobe stretching for decorative effects, using piercing ornaments to stretch and enlarge the earlobes to accommodate plugs.

Negative effects of wearing earrings

Some research has found that the most frequent complications connected with wearing earrings are:[22]

A noticeable relationship has been found by Polish scientists between the piercing of young girls' earlobes and their subsequently developing allergic skin reactions.[23] [24] [25] In the view of Professor Ewa Czarnobilska, the manager of the research team, the primary reason for the allergies connected to earrings is the presence of nickel, which is a common component of the alloys used in jewelry production and leaches from the earrings. The symptom seen is generally eczema, and is often misdiagnosed as a food allergy, for instance to milk. The specific mechanism in allergies caused by earrings is the contact of nickel ions with the lymphatic system.

The study noted that children who stopped wearing earrings did not see the disappearance of the allergic symptoms. The immune system remembers the presence of the nickel ions in the person's blood and lymph, so the child can still react to:

Research by allergists has found that in a sample of 428 pupils of ages 7–8 and 16–17 years old:

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Steinberg, Avraham (2003). Encyclopedia of Jewish Medical Ethics: a Compilation of Jewish Medical Law on All Topics of Medical Interest. Jerusalem: Feldheim Publishers. p. 350. .
  2. Web site: Popelka . Re:Why do we have earlobes, what are they for, since when? . 31 August 1999 . MadSci Network . 16 July 2015.
  3. Desmond Morris The Naked Ape: A Zoologist's Study of the Human Animal (Hardback: ; Reprint:) Jonathan Cape, 1967 . Chapter 2, page 59 of Corgi paperback ed
  4. Azaria R, Adler N, Silfen R, Regev D, Hauben DJ . Morphometry of the adult human earlobe: a study of 547 subjects and clinical application . Plast. Reconstr. Surg. . 111 . 7 . 2398–2402; discussion 2403–2404 . June 2003 . 12794488 . 10.1097/01.PRS.0000060995.99380.DE . 38636234 .
  5. Mader S. S. (2000): Human Biology. McGraw–Hill, New York, .
  6. Boaz N. T. (1999): Essentials of biological anthropology. Prentice Hall, New Jersey,.
  7. 14277139 . 15 . 1965 . Acta Genet Stat Med . 77–86 . Dutta . P . Ganguly . P . Further Observations on Ear Lobe Attachment . 10.1159/000151894.
  8. Messeri E. (1967): "Variabilità morfologica del lobolo auricolare in Sardegna". Atti Soc. Peloritana, Sc. Fis. mat. nat., 13 (1/2): 89.
  9. Glass B., Sacks M. S., John E. F., Hess C. (1952): "Genetic Drift in a Religious Isolate: An Analysis of the Causes of Variation in Blood Group and Other Gene Frequencies in a Small Population". Phys. Anthrop., 144.
  10. Hadžiselimović R. (1981): "Genetic distance among local human populations in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Yugoslavia)". Coll. Antrop., 5. (Suppl.): 63–66.
  11. Saldanha . P. H. . 1960 . Frequencies of consanguineous marriages in North-east of São Paulo, Brazil . Acta Genet . 10 . 1. 71–88 . 10.1159/000151120 . 13745577 .
  12. Chaisson . L. P. . 1963 . Gene frequencies in the Micmac Indians . J. Hered. . 54 . 2. 229–36 . 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a107255 . 14086177 .
  13. Lai . Y. C. . Walsh . R. J. . 1966 . Observation on ear lobe types . Acta Genet. Statist. Med. . 16 . 3. 250–7 . 10.1159/000151971 . 5953713 .
  14. Dutta . P. C. . 1963 . A note on the ear lobe . Acta Genet. Statist. Med. . 15 . 3. 290–4 . 10.1159/000151809 . 14101393 .
  15. Bhasin . M. K. . 1969 . Ear lobe attachment among Newars of Nepal . Hum. Hered. . 19 . 5. 506–8 . 10.1159/000152259 . 5365889 .
  16. Gabel . N. E. . 1958 . A racial study of the Fijans . Anthrop. Rec. . 20 . 1. 22 .
  17. Chatopadhyay . P. K. . 1968 . A note on the ear lobe attachment among the Jats and Ahirs . Acta Genet. Statist. Med. . 18 . 3. 277–82 . 10.1159/000152145 . 5694908 .
  18. Wiener . 1937 . Complications in ear genetics . J. Hered. . 28 . 3. 425 . 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a104304.
  19. Tiwari . S. C. . Bhasin . M. K. . 1969 . Frequency of hand clasping and ear lobe attachment in Tibetians . J. Hered. . 19 . 4. 658–661 . 10.1159/000152280 . 5399262 .
  20. Dronamraju . K. R. . 1966 . Ear lobe attachment in the Buffalo region . Acta Genet. Statist. Med. . 16 . 3. 258–64 . 10.1159/000151972 . 5953714 .
  21. Web site: HELGAADMIN . Are your Earlobes Attached? . 15 December 2014 . Quantum Healing Institute Blog .
  22. Watson . D . Torn earlobe repair . Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America . 35 . 1 . 187–205, vii–viii . 2002 . 11781215 . 10.1016/s0030-6665(03)00102-6.
  23. http://www.fizjoinformator.pl/szkodliwe-kolczyki/ Harmful earrings (pl. Szkodliwe kolczyki)
  24. http://www.tvn24.pl/krakow,50/polscy-naukowcy-ostrzegaja-kolczyki-szkodza-dzieciom,462077.html Polish Scientists learn: earrings harm children (pl. Polscy naukowcy ostrzegają: kolczyki szkodzą dzieciom)
  25. Czarnobilska E. . Oblutowicz K. . Dyga W. . Wsołek-Wnek K. . Śpiewak R. . Contact hypersensitivity and allergic contact dermatitis among school children and teenagers with eczema. . Contact Dermatitis . 60 . 5 . 264–269 . May 2009 . John Wiley & Sons A/S . 10.1111/j.1600-0536.2009.01537.x. 19397618 . 30920753 . free .