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Tinnitus and hyperacusis: Contributions of paraflocculus, reticular formation and stress.
- Source :
-
Hearing research [Hear Res] 2017 Jun; Vol. 349, pp. 208-222. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Mar 07. - Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Tinnitus and hyperacusis are common and potentially serious hearing disorders associated with noise-, age- or drug-induced hearing loss. Accumulating evidence suggests that tinnitus and hyperacusis are linked to excessive neural activity in a distributed brain network that not only includes the central auditory pathway, but also brain regions involved in arousal, emotion, stress and motor control. Here we examine electrophysiological changes in two novel non-auditory areas implicated in tinnitus and hyperacusis: the caudal pontine reticular nucleus (PnC), involved in arousal, and the paraflocculus lobe of the cerebellum (PFL), implicated in head-eye coordination and gating tinnitus and we measure the changes in corticosterone stress hormone levels. Using the salicylate-induced model of tinnitus and hyperacusis, we found that long-latency (>10 ms) sound-evoked response components in both the brain regions were significantly enhanced after salicylate administration, while the short-latency responses were reduced, likely reflecting cochlear hearing loss. These results are consistent with the central gain model of tinnitus and hyperacusis, which proposes that these disorders arise from the amplification of neural activity in central auditory pathway plus other regions linked to arousal, emotion, tinnitus gating and motor control. Finally, we demonstrate that salicylate results in an increase in corticosterone level in a dose-dependent manner consistent with the notion that stress may interact with hearing loss in tinnitus and hyperacusis development. This increased stress response has the potential to have wide-ranging effects on the central nervous system and may therefore contribute to brain-wide changes in neural activity.<br /> (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Subjects :
- Acoustic Stimulation
Animals
Auditory Pathways physiopathology
Behavior, Animal
Biomarkers blood
Corticosterone blood
Disease Models, Animal
Emotions
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Hearing
Hyperacusis blood
Hyperacusis chemically induced
Hyperacusis psychology
Male
Motor Activity
Pontine Tegmentum pathology
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Reaction Time
Sodium Salicylate
Stress, Psychological blood
Stress, Psychological psychology
Time Factors
Tinnitus blood
Tinnitus chemically induced
Tinnitus psychology
Cerebellum physiopathology
Hyperacusis physiopathology
Midbrain Reticular Formation physiopathology
Pontine Tegmentum physiopathology
Stress, Psychological physiopathology
Tinnitus physiopathology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1878-5891
- Volume :
- 349
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Hearing research
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 28286099
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2017.03.005