## Correct Answer: B. Incus The incus (anvil) is the middle ossicle of the three ossicles in the middle ear. Morphologically, it has a distinctive body with two processes: the long process (which articulates with the stapes via the incudostapedial joint) and the short process (which attaches to the posterior wall of the tympanic cavity via the posterior incudal ligament). The incus is the largest of the three ossicles and sits between the malleus (medially) and stapes (laterally). Its characteristic anvil-like shape with the prominent body and two divergent processes makes it identifiable on imaging or anatomical specimens. The incus plays a critical role in the ossicular chain by transmitting vibrations from the malleus to the stapes, converting tympanic membrane vibrations into footplate movement at the oval window. In Indian ENT practice, ossicular chain integrity is routinely assessed during otoscopy, imaging (CT temporal bone), and ossiculoplasty procedures for conductive hearing loss. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Malleus** — The malleus (hammer) is the medial ossicle with a handle (manubrium) that attaches to the tympanic membrane and a head that articulates with the incus. While it is the first ossicle in the chain, its morphology differs distinctly—it lacks the two divergent processes characteristic of the incus. The malleus has a more elongated handle and rounded head, not the anvil-like body of the incus. **C. Vomer** — The vomer is a thin, flat nasal bone forming part of the nasal septum—it is not an ossicle of the middle ear. This is a classic NBE trap pairing a nasal structure with middle ear anatomy. The vomer is located in the nasal cavity, not the tympanic cavity, and has no role in sound transmission. **D. Stapes** — The stapes (stirrup) is the smallest and most medial ossicle, articulating with the incus via the incudostapedial joint and inserting into the oval window. Its footplate is much smaller and more delicate than the incus body. The stapes has a characteristic stirrup-like shape with anterior and posterior crura, distinctly different from the anvil morphology of the incus. ## High-Yield Facts - **Incus morphology**: Body with long process (articulates with stapes) and short process (posterior ligament attachment)—largest of three ossicles. - **Ossicular chain sequence**: Malleus → Incus → Stapes transmits vibrations from tympanic membrane to oval window. - **Incudostapedial joint**: Synovial joint between incus long process and stapes head; disruption causes conductive hearing loss. - **Incus blood supply**: Primarily from anterior tympanic artery; ischemia can occur in chronic otitis media. - **Ossiculoplasty indication**: Ossicular chain discontinuity (malleus-incus or incus-stapes fixation) in conductive hearing loss—common in India due to chronic suppurative otitis media (CSOM). ## Mnemonics **MAI (Malleus-Anvil-Incus order)** Malleus (hammer) → Anvil (incus) → Incus (stapes). Remember: Malleus is lateral, Incus is middle, Stapes is medial in the ossicular chain. **Incus shape memory** **Incus = Anvil** (two divergent processes like an anvil horn). Malleus = Hammer (single handle). Stapes = Stirrup (small, delicate). ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the vomer (nasal bone) with middle ear ossicles to test whether students confuse nasal anatomy with tympanic cavity structures—a common error in candidates who rush through anatomy sections. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian patients with chronic suppurative otitis media (CSOM), the incus is the most commonly eroded ossicle due to osteitis and granulation tissue; ossiculoplasty with incus reconstruction or replacement is a standard salvage procedure in tertiary ENT centers. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 61 (Otology); Robbins Ch. 25 (Ear pathology)_
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