The effects of moderate and low levels of acoustic overstimulation on stereocilia and their tip links in the guinea pig


Autoria(s): Clark, J. A.; Pickles, J. O.
Data(s)

01/01/1996

Resumo

Guinea pigs were exposed to pure tones of 10 kHz at intensities between 98 and 115 dB SPL for 5-30 min, to produce varying degrees of acoustic trauma. Changes in auditory thresholds were measured electrophysiologically, and the animals were immediately fixed for scanning electron microscopy. Correlation between morphological changes to the hair bundle and losses in threshold, showed that with the smallest degrees of trauma (98 dB SPL for 15 min, mean maximum threshold loss of 22 dB), damage was confined to a small stretch of inner hair cells (IHC), with only subtle changes to the stereocilia of the outer hair cells (OHC). At exposure intensities greater than 102 dB SPL (duration: 15 min) the IHC stereocilia in the centre of the lesion were always substantially disarrayed. Substantial damage to the OHC bundles was seen only with exposures above 110 dB SPL(duration: greater than or equal to 5 min), producing threshold losses of 50 dB or more. Tip links were lost only where the stereocilia were disarrayed. It is concluded that the tip links are not the most vulnerable components of the cochlear hair cell, but that relatively low levels of acoustic stimulation can cause significant damage to the stereociliary bundle of the IHCs.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57358

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier/North-Holland Biomedical Press

Palavras-Chave #Neurosciences #Otorhinolaryngology #Acoustic Trauma #Hair Cell #Stereocilia #Tip Link #Guinea Pig #Hair-cells #Noise Trauma #Hearing-loss #Exposure #Transduction #Protection #Stimulation #Temporary #Cochlea #Osmium #1109 Neurosciences
Tipo

Journal Article