Background:Permanent loss of outer hair cell (OHC) amplification may occur within days of acoustic overexposure. This loss of sensory function typically results in an immediate loss of neural sensitivity although neurodegeneration occurs months or years after damage to OHCs.
This delay in neurodegeneration might provide an opportunity to preserve neural sensitivity although OHC amplification is permanently lost.Purpose:To test the hypothesis that neural functions can be preserved after permanent and severe loss of OHC amplification. To begin to address
this possibility, an animal model of severe permanent loss of both OHC and neural functions was established.Research Design:This research employed a 4 × 4 split-plot factorial design, with four levels of the within-subject factor (time: baseline, 1-day, 1-week, and 1-mo postnoise
exposure) and four levels of the between-subject factor (experimental groups: control, noise exposed, therapy, and noise exposed + therapy).Study Sample:Twenty-six hooded male Long-Evans rats (263 ± 63 g) served as subjects for this experiment. All animals exhibited baseline
auditory function that approximated normative values for rats of the same strain.Data Collection and Analysis:Distortion product otoacoustic emissions and auditory brainstem responses were used to assay and differentiate OHC versus neural functions. Factorial analysis of variances was
computed to identify statistically significant main effects and Dunnett testing was employed in post hoc computations.Intervention:To rescue neural function after permanent loss of OHC amplification, small molecular weight carboxy alkyl esters were employed after noise injury.Results:The
results revealed that in the presence of permanent loss of OHC amplification, the loss of neural sensitivity could be rescued. In addition, auditory brainstem response wave I amplitudes at suprathreshold levels were rescued from noise-induced depletion into the biologic noise floor.Conclusion:Since
mammalian OHCs do not regenerate after damage, these results encourage further experiments aimed at preserving neural functions following noise injury.
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Keywords:
noise-induced hearing loss;
otoprotection;
repair
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date:
January 1, 2016
More about this publication?
The Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA) is a scholarly peer-reviewed publication and the official journal of the American Academy of Audiology. JAAA publishes articles and clinical reports in all areas of audiology, including audiological assessment, amplification, aural habilitation and rehabilitation, auditory electrophysiology, vestibular assessment, hearing and balance public health, and hearing and vestibular science. The journal is an online-only publication with a related continuing-education assessment program available to Academy members. Beginning in January 2025, the Academy resumed its role as the publisher of JAAA.
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