Literature DB >> 17882574

Hypoxic changes in the central nervous system of noise-exposed mice.

Young-Jin Kim1, Hun Hee Kang, Joong Ho Ahn, Jong Woo Chung.   

Abstract

CONCLUSION: After a noise-induced transient threshold shift, hypoxia occurred in the central nervous system, especially in the auditory cortex, the hippocampus, and the inferior colliculus.
OBJECTIVES: Noise-induced inner ear hypoxia was shown by measurement of an increase in hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha, which is expressed? in the nucleus under hypoxic conditions. This study uses pimonidazole to localize site-specific hypoxic changes occurring in the mouse central auditory pathway during noise-induced auditory threshold shift.
METHOD: BALB/c hybrid mice with normal hearing were exposed to 122 dB SPL white noise for 3 h. Immediately after exposure to the noise, and 7 d after noise exposure, the brains of mice were collected. Brains were cryosectioned into slices 15 microm thick and examined by immunofluorescence after staining with pimonidazole HCl.
RESULTS: After 3 h of exposure to 120 dB SPL noise, the hearing thresholds of mice decreased to 51.1+/-8.6 dB SPL (n =14), but hearing recovered in 7 d. After noise exposure, pimonidazole signal increased in the auditory cortex, the hippocampus, and the inferior colliculus. The pimonidazole signal remained elevated after 7 d. In control mice, pimonidazole did not stain any brain region.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17882574     DOI: 10.1080/03655230701624905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Otolaryngol Suppl        ISSN: 0365-5237


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  3 in total

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