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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 3 March 2001, pp. 1257-1269
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Monash, Victoria 3800, Australia
Rajan, R.
Unilateral Hearing Losses Alter Loud Sound-Induced Temporary
Threshold Shifts and Efferent Effects in the Normal-Hearing Ear. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1257-1269, 2001. In animals with bilaterally normal hearing,
olivocochlear pathways can protect the cochlea from the temporary
shifts in hearing sensitivity (temporary threshold shifts; TTSs) caused
by short-duration intense loud sounds. The crossed olivocochlear
pathway provides protection during binaural loud sound, and uncrossed
pathways protect when monaural or binaural loud sounds occur in noise
backgrounds. Here I demonstrate that when there is a chronic unilateral
hearing loss, effects of loud sounds, and efferent effects on loud
sound, in the normal-hearing ear differ markedly from normal. Three
categories of test animals with unilateral hearing loss were tested for
effects at the normal-hearing ear. In all categories a monaural loud
tone to the normal-hearing ear produced lower-than-normal TTSs,
apparently because of a tonic re-setting of that ear's susceptibility
to loud sound. Second, in the two test categories in which the
hearing-loss ear was only partly damaged, binaural loud sound
exacerbated TTSs in the normal-hearing ear because it caused
threshold shifts that were a combination of "pure" TTSs and
uncrossed efferent suppression of cochlear sensitivity. (In normal
cats, this binaural tone results in crossed olivocochlear protection
that reduces TTS.) Binaural loud sound did not produce such
uncrossed efferent effects in the test category in which the nontest
ear had suffered total hearing loss, suggesting that this uncrossed
efferent effect required binaural input to the CNS. It is noteworthy
that, in the absence of this uncrossed efferent suppression, the pure
loud sound-alone induced TTSs after binaural exposure were low. Thus in
the absence of any efferent effect, the normal-hearing cochlea had a
reduced susceptibility to loud tone-induced damage. Finally, the
results suggest that, with respect to cochlear actions at high sound
levels, uncrossed and crossed efferent pathways may exert different
effects at the one type of receptor cell.
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R. Rajan Cochlear Outer-Hair-Cell Efferents and Complex-Sound-Induced Hearing Loss: Protective and Opposing Effects J Neurophysiol, December 1, 2001; 86(6): 3073 - 3076. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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