Publications by authors named "H Dengerink"

Carotid artery infusions of substance P yielded reductions in systemic blood pressure and elevations in cochlear blood flow (CoBF), measured via laser Doppler flowmeter, with no alterations in cochlear action potentials or cochlear microphonics in Wistar-Kyoto rats. Additionally, direct micro-infusions of substance P into the anterior inferior cerebellar artery, which contributes to the local vascular perfusion of the cochlea, yielded elevations in CoBF with no changes in systemic blood pressure. Pretreatment with a specific substance P receptor antagonist, ([D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9]SP) via the carotid artery or the anterior inferior cerebellar artery, diminished subsequent substance P-induced vascular responses.

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A group of 50 first, fourth and sixth grade children provided diaries of their activities each hour of the day for 12 consecutive weeks. These activities were correlated with their auditory thresholds assessed at two different times during the behavioral recording period. The results indicated that these schoolchildren experience relatively little noise exposure during their normal daily activities.

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Four separate experiments examined the effects of cigarette smoking on temporary threshold shifts (TTS) following noise exposure. One experiment compared smokers and non-smokers after the subjects had abstained from smoking for at least 6 h. A second experiment tested only smokers who smoked a cigarette just before noise exposure, during the noise exposure and in a control condition during which they did not smoke.

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This study examined the noise level emitted by toys and recreational articles used by children and teenagers. The results indicate that many of the items tested emit sufficiently intense noise to be a source of noise induced hearing loss in school-age children. While the baby toys provided noise exposure within the limits of national regulations, they are most intense in a frequency range that corresponds to the resonance frequency of the external auditory canal of very young children.

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A primary goal of pharmacologic treatment for otopathologies of vascular origin is to elevate cochlear blood flow (CoBF), thus facilitating the transport of oxygen and nutrients without compromising perfusion pressure in other tissues. In the present investigation, significant increases in CoBF were measured during intra-arterial infusion of the plasma expanding agent, hydroxyethyline starch (HES), and the vasodilator nimodipine, in anesthetized adult male guinea pigs. There were no changes in systemic blood pressure during the infusion of HES or nimodipine.

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