| Literature DB >> 22207104 |
Vincenza Cascella1, Pietro Giordano, Stavros Hatzopoulos, Joseph Petruccelli, Silvano Prosser, Edi Simoni, Laura Astolfi, Anna Rita Fetoni, Henryk Skarżyński, Alessandro Martini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Data from animal studies show that antioxidants can compensate against noise-induced stress and sensory hair cell death. The aim of this study was to evaluate the otoprotection efficacy of various versions of orally administered Acuval 400 against noise damage in a rat animal model. MATERIAL/Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22207104 PMCID: PMC3560681 DOI: 10.12659/msm.882180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci Monit ISSN: 1234-1010
Detailed data generated from the repeated measures model showing the pre-noise exposure values of groups A, B, C and D across the tested frequencies. The column titled “mean Estimate” refers to the Average threshold values in dB SPL. The last column titled “Error” presents estimates of the standard error.
| Frequency | Group and Time | Mean Estimate | Error |
|---|---|---|---|
| CLICK | A time 0 | 34.6949 | 1.3722 |
| B time 0 | 28.0347 | 1.9189 | |
| C time 0 | 30.0316 | 1.1878 | |
| D time 0 | 28.7633 | 1.4679 | |
| 4 kHz | A time 0 | 51.0671 | 2.0116 |
| B time 0 | 45.5796 | 3.1072 | |
| C time 0 | 45.4752 | 1.7913 | |
| D time 0 | 46.5358 | 2.3653 | |
| 8 kHz | A time 0 | 39.5017 | 1.7159 |
| B time 0 | 39.5845 | 2.9754 | |
| C time 0 | 35.7268 | 1.5519 | |
| D time 0 | 35.7319 | 2.0027 | |
| 16 kHz | A time 0 | 35.3546 | 1.6773 |
| B time 0 | 33.3505 | 2.7372 | |
| C time 0 | 31.6006 | 1.4992 | |
| D time 0 | 30.7574 | 1.8825 | |
| 32 kHz | A time 0 | 51.6767 | 1.4202 |
| B time 0 | 47.1562 | 2.2437 | |
| C time 0 | 46.3500 | 1.2738 | |
| D time 0 | 45.0778 | 1.5989 |
Figure 1Data (threshold shifts with 95% confidence interval error bars), from group D. The lack of significant mean differences across the tested frequencies per observation window, is an indication of lack of possible ototoxic side-effects. Negative threshold shifts can interpreted as an improvement over the pre-noise exposure values (t=0), but since these differences are not statistically significant, no final conclusions can be made.
Detailed data from the threshold shifts observed in group D at the tested frequencies and times. The third column titled “Estimate” shows the shifts in dB. Negative values suggest smaller shifts and are considered as “better”. The table shows that for 4, 8, 16 and 32 kHz the t=21d values are lower than the pre-noise exposure values. This could imply an improvement of the hearing threshold, but since the observed differences are not statistically significant no such conclusion can be reach.
| Frequency | Label | Estimate | Error | DF | t Value | Pr>t |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLICK | X1-X0 | 0.01443 | 2.0750 | 87 | 0.01 | 0.9945 |
| X7-X0 | −2.1927 | 2.3360 | 87 | −0.94 | 0.3505 | |
| X14-X0 | 1.5618 | 2.5410 | 87 | 0.61 | 0.5404 | |
| X21-X0 | 1.2870 | 3.5665 | 87 | 0.36 | 0.7191 | |
| 4 kHz | X1-X0 | −0.09368 | 3.3393 | 87 | −0.03 | 0.9777 |
| X7-X0 | −5.0618 | 3.6844 | 87 | −1.37 | 0.1730 | |
| X14-X0 | −1.1426 | 3.8930 | 87 | −0.29 | 0.7698 | |
| X21-X0 | −5.6990 | 4.9947 | 87 | −1.14 | 0.2570 | |
| 8 kHZ | X1-X0 | −0.2249 | 2.8208 | 87 | −0.08 | 0.9366 |
| X7-X0 | −0.00214 | 3.3481 | 87 | −0.00 | 0.9995 | |
| X14-X0 | −2.3812 | 3.2065 | 87 | −0.74 | 0.4597 | |
| X21-X0 | −0.8851 | 4.5977 | 87 | −0.19 | 0.8478 | |
| 16 kHz | X1-X0 | −0.5852 | 2.6342 | 87 | −0.22 | 0.8247 |
| X7-X0 | −0.7871 | 3.0951 | 87 | −0.25 | 0.7999 | |
| X14-X0 | 1.0766 | 3.2179 | 87 | 0.33 | 0.7388 | |
| X21-X0 | −0.8164 | 4.3146 | 87 | −0.19 | 0.8504 | |
| 32 kHz | X1-X0 | −0.8349 | 2.2395 | 87 | −0.37 | 0.7102 |
| X7-X0 | −1.8674 | 2.6037 | 87 | −0.72 | 0.4752 | |
| X14-X0 | −2.9909 | 2.5618 | 87 | −1.17 | 0.2462 | |
| X21-X0 | −3.6471 | 3.5021 | 87 | −1.04 | 0.3006 |
Figure 2Data from the click and 4 kHz datasets, of all treated groups, in post-treatment observation windows from t=1 to 21d. The Y-axis depicts threshold in dB SPL, the X-axis time in days.
Figure 3Data from the 8, 16 and 32 kHz datasets, of all treated groups, in post-treatment observation windows from t=1 to 21d. The Y-axis depicts threshold in dB SPL, the X-axis time in days.
The table shows the significant mean differences (p≤0.05) between groups A, B, C, D, at the tested frequencies and times. Differences which are not reported, were not found statistically significant. To facilitate the interpretation of the data, the table reports groups in order of decreasing mean threshold estimates (smaller shifts are better). For example at t=1d and at the click frequency the table data indicate that the mean of group A was larger than the means of groups C, B and D. It also shows that the mean of group C is larger that the mean of Group D.
| Tested frequency | T=1d | T=7d | T=14d | T=21d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Click | A>C, B, D; C>D | B, A>C, D | B, A>D, C | B, A>C; D>C |
| 4 kHz | A>C, D | B, A>C, D | B, A>D, C | B>D, C |
| 8 kHz | A>C, B, D; C>D | A>C, D | A>C, D | A>D, C; B>C |
| 16 kHz | A, C>B, D | A>C, D | A>B, C, D | A>C, D |
| 32 kHz | C, A>B, D | A>D | A, C>D | A>B, C, D |