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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 3 September 2001, pp. 1277-1288
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Monash, VIC 3800, Australia
Rajan, R.
Noise Priming and the Effects of Different Cochlear Centrifugal
Pathways on Loud-Sound-Induced Hearing Loss. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 1277-1288, 2001. Priming/conditioning the cochlea with moderately loud sound can reduce
damage caused by subsequent loud sound. This study examined immediate
effects of short-term priming with monaural broadband noise on
temporary threshold shifts (TTSs) in hearing caused by a subsequent
loud high-frequency tone and the role of centrifugal olivocochlear
pathways. Priming caused delay-dependent changes in tone-induced TTSs,
particularly or only at frequencies higher than the peak tone-affected
frequency, through two general effects: a short-lasting increase in
cochlear susceptibility to loud sound and longer-lasting complex end
effects of centrifugal pathways. The results indicated the following
points. Priming noise had "pure" cochlear effects, outlasting its
presentation and declining with delay, that exacerbated tone-induced
TTSs at frequencies higher than the peak tone-affected frequency. The centrifugal uncrossed medial olivocochlear system (UMOCS) could prevent
this noise exacerbation and as this noise effect declined, could even
reduce tone-induced TTSs below those to the unprimed tone. For longer
delays, when priming noise no longer had any exacerbative "pure"
cochlear effects on TTSs, UMOCS exacerbated TTSs above those to the
unprimed tone. The crossed medial olivocochlear system (CMOCS) appeared
to show a gradual "build-up" of effects postpriming. A parallel
study showed it exercised no end effect on TTSs when noise and tone
were concurrent. With priming, CMOCS effects were observed. For the
shortest priming delay, the CMOCS blocked a UMOCS effect preventing
noise exacerbation of tone-induced TTSs. For longer delays, CMOCS end
effects, when present, reduced tone-induced TTSs below those to the
unprimed tone. The CMOCS may oscillate between producing these effects
and exerting no end-effect. With increasing delay CMOCS protection
occurred in a greater proportion of animals. Finally, with a delay of
600 s between primer and loud tone, all these systems appeared to have reset to normal so that TTSs were similar to those in the unprimed
condition. Thus the effects of short-term priming are not simple and do
not suggest that centrifugal pathways act automatically as a protective
system during such priming.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. Rajan Contextual Modulation of Olivocochlear Pathway Effects on Loud Sound-Induced Cochlear Hearing Desensitization J Neurophysiol, April 1, 2005; 93(4): 1977 - 1988. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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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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