Age-related cochlear synaptopathy: an early-onset contributor to auditory functional decline.
Y. Sergeyenko,K. Lall,K. Lall,M. C. Liberman,M. C. Liberman,Sharon G. Kujawa,Sharon G. Kujawa,Sharon G. Kujawa +7 more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Early neuronal processes interact with glia to establish a scaffold for orderly innervation of the cochlea
TL;DR: It is shown that the earliest processes are closely associated with a population of glia that grow ahead of them, suggesting a tiered mechanism for reliable axon guidance.
Efficacy of auditory training in older adults by electrophysiological tests
TL;DR: Auditory training may play an important role in the elderly treatment program with speech perception defects and the usefulness of this rehabilitation can be objectively evaluated through cortical and subcortical electrophysiological methods.
1
Emerging Interventions for Age-Related Hearing Loss: Review of the CLARITY-1 Trial Through the Description of the Pharmaceutical Development Phases
TL;DR: A brief review of current knowledge about the nature of auditory dysfunction commonly associated with adhesion problems in the aging population finds it necessary to select patients suitable for use in the audiology practice.
1
The Relation Between Cochlear Neuropathy, Hidden Hearing Loss and Obscure Auditory Dysfunction
TL;DR: Widespread loss of auditory nerve fibers can take place without hair cell loss or threshold elevation, as a result of either noise exposure or ageing, leading to perceptual deficits without affecting the audiogram.
1
Inner hair cell synapse density influences auditory processing
Lingchao Ji,Beatriz C. Borges,David T. Martel,Calvin Wu,M. Charles Liberman,Susan E. Shore,Gabriel Corfas +6 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that cochlear synaptopathy causes temporal processing deficits, which may be a key contributor to the hearing impairments that define HHL, and the improvement in temporal acuity achieved by increasing Ntf3 expression and synapse density suggests a therapeutic strategy for improving hearing in noise for individuals withsynaptopathy of various etiologies.
1
References
Adding Insult to Injury: Cochlear Nerve Degeneration after “Temporary” Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
TL;DR: It is shown that acoustic overexposures causing moderate, but completely reversible, threshold elevation leave cochlear sensory cells intact, but cause acute loss of afferent nerve terminals and delayed degeneration of the co chlear nerve.
2.3K
Prestin is required for electromotility of the outer hair cell and for the cochlear amplifier.
TL;DR: It is shown that targeted deletion of prestin in mice results in loss of outer hair cell electromotility in vitro and a 40–60 dB loss of cochlear sensitivity in vivo, without disruption of mechano-electrical transduction in outer hair cells.
972
Tinnitus with a normal audiogram: physiological evidence for hidden hearing loss and computational model.
Roland Schaette,David McAlpine +1 more
TL;DR: It is reported that in human subjects with tinnitus and a normal audiogram, auditory brainstem responses show a significantly reduced amplitude of the wave I potential but normal amplitudes of the more centrally generated wave V.
962
Assessment of hearing in 80 inbred strains of mice by ABR threshold analyses.
TL;DR: A large-scale, auditory screening project is being undertaken at The Jackson Laboratory (TJL) to identify mice with inherited hearing disorders, and this large database establishes a reliable reference for normal hearing mouse strains.
858
Noise-induced cochlear neuropathy is selective for fibers with low spontaneous rates
Adam C. Furman,Adam C. Furman,Sharon G. Kujawa,Sharon G. Kujawa,M. Charles Liberman,M. Charles Liberman +5 more
TL;DR: Responses from single auditory nerve fibers in guinea pigs exposed to neuropathic noise were recorded, suggesting recovery of hair cell function and a change in population statistics suggesting a selective loss of fibers with low- and medium-spontaneous rates.
745