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
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Citations
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Surdités cachées ; atteinte des cellules sensorielles cochléaires ou du nerf auditif ?
Marion Souchal
- 26 Sep 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the evolution of the audiovisual caracteries of the CCA of the human brain and investigate the effect of these on the performance of the neuropathies.
1
The effect of caloric restriction on age-related hearing loss and the impact of repeated sound exposures
Paula Mannström
- 18 Oct 2013
TL;DR: The aim was to develop an animal model, to mimic human life-time noise exposure, which could be repeated several times without causing a permanent hearing loss in the rat, and its impact on age-related hearing loss can be studied.
Cochlear metabolomics, highlighting novel insights of purine metabolic alterations in age-related hearing loss
Huanzhi Wan,Wenjing Wang,Jingchun Liu,Yunlong Zhang,Bingqian Yang,Rongkai Hua,Huidong Chen,Shiming Chen,Qingquan Hua +8 more
TL;DR: Altered metabolic profiling is both the cause and manifestation of pathology, and the results suggest that cellular senescence and dysfunctional cochlear metabolism may contribute to the progression of AHL.
1
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La sensibilité auditive à l'harmonicité, en présence ou en l'absence de déficit cochléaire
Damien Bonnard
- 19 May 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that octave simultanee is reconnuepar un mecanisme insensible a la direction des ecarts par rapport a l'octave, alors que teln'est pas le cas for l' octave sequentielle.
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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