Literature DB >> 23086424

Acoustic experience alters the aged auditory system.

Jeremy G Turner1, Jennifer L Parrish, Loren Zuiderveld, Stacy Darr, Larry F Hughes, Donald M Caspary, Esma Idrezbegovic, Barbara Canlon.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Presbyacusis, one of the most common ailments of the elderly, is often treated with hearing aids, which serve to reintroduce some or all of those sounds lost to peripheral hearing loss. However, little is known about the underlying changes to the ear and brain as a result of such experience with sound late in life. The present study attempts to model this process by rearing aged CBA mice in an augmented acoustic environment (AAE).
DESIGN: Aged (22-23 months) male (n = 12) and female (n = 9) CBA/CaJ mice were reared in either 6 weeks of low-level (70 dB SPL) broadband noise stimulation (AAE) or normal vivarium conditions. Changes as a function of the treatment were measured for behavior, auditory brainstem response thresholds, hair cell cochleograms, and gamma aminobutyric acid neurochemistry in the key central auditory structures of the inferior colliculus and primary auditory cortex.
RESULTS: The AAE-exposed group was associated with sex-specific changes in cochlear pathology, auditory brainstem response thresholds, and gamma aminobutyric acid neurochemistry. Males exhibited significantly better thresholds and reduced hair cell loss (relative to controls) whereas females exhibited the opposite effect. AAE was associated with increased glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD67) levels in the inferior colliculus of both male and female mice. However, in primary auditory cortex AAE exposure was associated with increased GAD67 labeling in females and decreased GAD67 in males.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that exposing aged mice to a low-level AAE alters both peripheral and central properties of the auditory system and these changes partially interact with sex or the degree of hearing loss before AAE. Although direct application of these findings to hearing aid use or auditory training in aged humans would be premature, the results do begin to provide direct evidence for the underlying changes that might be occurring as a result of hearing aid use late in life. These results suggest the aged brain retains significantly anatomical, electrophysiological, and neurochemical plasticity.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23086424      PMCID: PMC3740174          DOI: 10.1097/AUD.0b013e318269ca5b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ear Hear        ISSN: 0196-0202            Impact factor:   3.570


  72 in total

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2.  Effects of prolonged exposure to an augmented acoustic environment on the auditory system of middle-aged C57BL/6J mice: cochlear and central histology and sex differences.

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7.  Hearing impairment and social isolation in the elderly.

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Review 5.  Sex-based Differences in Hearing Loss: Perspectives From Non-clinical Research to Clinical Outcomess.

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Review 7.  Hearing aids: indications, technology, adaptation, and quality control.

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8.  Sex bias in basic and preclinical noise-induced hearing loss research.

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