Adding Insult to Injury: Cochlear Nerve Degeneration after “Temporary” Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Harvard University · Eaton (Taiwan) · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Overexposure to intense sound can cause temporary or permanent hearing loss. Postexposure recovery of threshold sensitivity has been assumed to indicate reversal of damage to delicate mechano-sensory and neural structures of the inner ear and no persistent or delayed consequences for auditory function. Here, we show, using cochlear functional assays and confocal imaging of the inner ear in mouse, that acoustic overexposures causing moderate, but completely reversible, threshold elevation leave cochlear sensory cells intact, but cause acute loss of afferent nerve terminals and delayed degeneration of the cochlear nerve. Results suggest that noise-induced damage to the ear has progressive consequences that are…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Hyperacusis
- Auditory fatigue
- Hearing loss
- Audiology
- Tinnitus
- Inner ear
- Medicine
- Cochlea