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Vestibular Type II Hair Cells

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Vestibular Type II Hair Cells

Overview

Vestibular Type II hair cells are mechanoreceptive sensory neurons located within the vestibular organs of the inner ear, specifically in the utricle, saccule, and ampullae of the semicircular canals. These specialized sensory receptors are responsible for detecting head movements, linear acceleration, and gravitational orientation—critical functions for maintaining balance, spatial awareness, and coordinated eye movements. Type II hair cells represent one of two major morphological classes of vestibular hair cells, distinguished from Type I cells by their cylindrical morphology, unique innervation patterns, and distinct biochemical characteristics. The vestibular system depends heavily on the coordinated function of both Type I and Type II hair cells to generate appropriate neural signals for equilibrium maintenance. Unlike their cochlear counterparts, which are almost exclusively Type I cells in mammals, vestibular organs maintain a substantial population of Type II cells that play crucial roles in encoding dynamic and static vestibular information.

Function/Biology


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