Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Hear Res ; 449: 109046, 2024 May 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38810373

ABSTRACT

Tinnitus, the perception of sound with no external auditory stimulus, is a complex, multifaceted, and potentially devastating disorder. Despite recent advances in our understanding of tinnitus, there are limited options for effective treatment. Tinnitus treatments are made more complicated by the lack of a test for tinnitus based on objectively measured physiological characteristics. Such an objective test would enable a greater understanding of tinnitus mechanisms and may lead to faster treatment development in both animal and human research. This review makes the argument that an objective tinnitus test, such as a non-invasive electrophysiological measure, is desperately needed. We review the current tinnitus assessment methods, the underlying neural correlates of tinnitus, the multiple tinnitus generation theories, and the previously investigated electrophysiological measurements of tinnitus. Finally, we propose an alternate objective test for tinnitus that may be valid in both animal and human subjects.

2.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 16: 995422, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36299293

ABSTRACT

Animal research focused on chronic tinnitus associated with noise-induced hearing loss can be expensive and time-consuming as a result of the behavioral training required. Although there exist a number of behavioral tests for tinnitus; there have been few formal direct comparisons of these tests. Here, we evaluated animals in two different tinnitus assessment methods. CBA/CaJ mice were trained in an operant conditioning, active avoidance (AA) test, and a reflexive, gap-induced pre-pulse inhibition of acoustic startle (GPIAS) test, or both. Tinnitus was induced in awake mice by unilateral continuous sound exposure using a 2-kHz- or 1 2 octave-wide noise centered at 16 kHz and presented at 113- or 116-dB SPL. Tinnitus was assessed 8 weeks after sound overexposure. Most mice had evidence of tinnitus behavior in at least one of the two behaviors. Of the mice evaluated in AA, over half (55%) had tinnitus positive behavior. In GPIAS, fewer animals (13%) were positive than were identified using the AA test. Few mice were positive in both tests (10%), and only one was positive for tinnitus behavior at the same spectral frequency in both tests. When the association between tinnitus behavior and spontaneous activity recorded in the inferior colliculus was compared, animals with tinnitus behavior in AA exhibited increased spontaneous activity, while those positive in GPIAS did not. Thus, it appears that operant conditioning tests, like AA, maybe more reliable and accurate tests for tinnitus than reflexive tests.

3.
Front Syst Neurosci ; 16: 920642, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35873097

ABSTRACT

The inferior colliculus (IC) is at the midpoint of the auditory system and integrates virtually all information ascending from the auditory brainstem, organizes it, and transmits the results to the auditory forebrain. Its abundant, excitatory local connections are crucial for this task. This study describes a long duration sound (LDS)-induced potentiation in the IC that changes both subsequent tone-evoked responses and spontaneous activity. Afterdischarges, changes of spontaneous spiking following an LDS, were seen previously in single neurons. Here, we used multi-channel probes to record activity before and after a single, tetanic sound and describe the changes in a population of IC neurons. Following a 60 s narrowband-noise stimulation, a subset of recording channels (∼16%) showed afterdischarges. A facilitated response spike rate to tone pips following an LDS was also observed in ∼16% of channels. Both channels with an afterdischarge and channels with facilitated tone responses had higher firing rates in response to LDS, and the magnitude of the afterdischarges increased with increased responses to the LDS. This is the first study examining the effect of LDS stimulation on tone-evoked responses. This observed facilitation in vivo has similarities to post-tetanic potentiation in vitro as both manner of induction (strong stimulation for several seconds) as well as time-course of the facilitation (second to minute range) are comparable. Channels with and without facilitation appear to be intermixed and distributed widely in the central nucleus of IC, and this suggests a heretofore unknown property of some IC neurons or their circuits. Consequently, this sound-evoked facilitation may enhance the sound-evoked output of these neurons, while, simultaneously, most other IC neurons have reduced or unchanged output in response to the same stimulus.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...