RESUMO
We tested the hypothesis that nimodipine, a dihydropyridine reported to increase blood flow, block calcium and potassium channels, and reduce ischemic damage, would alleviate noise-induced hearing loss. Young C57B1/6J mice were exposed to wide-band noise (2 min, 120 dB SPL), with ABR thresholds (4-50 kHz) determined before noise exposure, and from 1 h to 2 weeks afterwards. One group (n = 7) received nimodipine (30 mg/kg/day) in daily peanut butter food supplements beginning 24 h before exposure; the other group (n = 6) received peanut butter alone. In the pretest nimodipine significantly increased the latency of Wave P1 of the ABR (mean difference: 0.16 ms; P < 0.02), showing that calcium blockade depressed sensorineural efficiency, but ABR thresholds were not affected. Noise exposure produced a severe threshold loss that partially recovered in the first week after exposure, and then suffered a slight but significant loss in the second week. These effects were seen equally in both groups: nimodipine did not reduce the severity of the immediate hearing loss following noise exposure, nor did it benefit recovery.