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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 2 August 1999, pp. 863-873
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School; and Eaton-Peabody Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Kujawa, Sharon G. and
M. Charles Liberman.
Long-Term Sound Conditioning Enhances Cochlear Sensitivity. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 863-873, 1999. Sound conditioning, by chronic exposure to moderate-level sound, can
protect the inner ear (reduce threshold shifts and hair cell damage)
from subsequent high-level sound exposure. To investigate the
mechanisms underlying this protective effect, the present study focuses
on the physiological changes brought on by the conditioning exposure
itself. In our guinea-pig model, 6-h daily conditioning exposure to an
octave-band noise at 85 dB SPL reduces the permanent threshold shifts
(PTSs) from a subsequent 4-h traumatic exposure to the same noise band
at 109 dB SPL, as assessed by both compound action potentials (CAPs)
and distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs). The frequency
region of maximum threshold protection is approximately one-half octave
above the upper frequency cutoff of the exposure band. Protection is
also evident in the magnitude of suprathreshold CAPs and DPOAEs, where
effects are more robust and extend to higher frequencies than those
evident at or near threshold. The conditioning exposure also
enhanced cochlear sensitivity, when evaluated at the
same postconditioning time at which the traumatic exposure would be
delivered in a protection study. Response enhancements were seen in
both threshold and suprathreshold CAPs and DPOAEs. The frequency
dependence of the enhancement effects differed, however, by these two
metrics. For CAPs, effects were maximum in the same frequency region as
those most protected by the conditioning. For DPOAEs, enhancements were
shifted to lower frequencies. The conditioning exposure also enhanced
both ipsilaterally and contralaterally evoked olivocochlear (OC) reflex
strength, as assessed using DPOAEs. The frequency and level dependence
of the reflex enhancements were consistent with changes seen in
sound-evoked discharge rates in OC fibers after conditioning. However,
comparison with the frequency range and magnitude of
conditioning-related protection suggests that the protection cannot be
completely explained by amplification of the OC reflex and the known
protective effects of OC feedback. Rather, the present results suggest
that sound conditioning leads to changes in the physiology of the outer
hair cells themselves, the peripheral targets of the OC reflex.
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