AI Article Synopsis

  • Tinnitus is often linked to auditory trauma and the study aimed to develop an objective test using blast-exposed rats to measure auditory responses and synaptic health.
  • The "central gain theory" suggests tinnitus results from increased amplification in the auditory system due to sensory input loss, with findings supporting that this imbalance relates to behavioral signs of tinnitus.
  • Treatment with N-acetylcysteine and HPN-07 showed promising results by preserving cochlear synapses, normalizing auditory response ratios, and reducing tinnitus symptoms, indicating potential for therapeutic approaches in managing tinnitus.

Article Abstract

Tinnitus, the phantom perception of sound, often occurs as a clinical sequela of auditory traumas. In an effort to develop an objective test and therapeutic approach for tinnitus, the present study was performed in blast-exposed rats and focused on measurements of auditory brainstem responses (ABRs), prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response, and presynaptic ribbon densities on cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs). Although the exact mechanism is unknown, the "central gain theory" posits that tinnitus is a perceptual indicator of abnormal increases in the gain (or neural amplification) of the central auditory system to compensate for peripheral loss of sensory input from the cochlea. Our data from vehicle-treated rats supports this rationale; namely, blast-induced cochlear synaptopathy correlated with imbalanced elevations in the ratio of centrally-derived ABR wave V amplitudes to peripherally-derived wave I amplitudes, resulting in behavioral evidence of tinnitus. Logistic regression modeling demonstrated that the ABR wave V/I amplitude ratio served as a reliable metric for objectively identifying tinnitus. Furthermore, histopathological examinations in blast-exposed rats revealed tinnitus-related changes in the expression patterns of key plasticity factors in the central auditory pathway, including chronic loss of Arc/Arg3.1 mobilization. Using a formulation of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) and disodium 2,4-disulfophenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone (HPN-07) as a therapeutic for addressing blast-induced neurodegeneration, we measured a significant treatment effect on preservation or restoration of IHC ribbon synapses, normalization of ABR wave V/I amplitude ratios, and reduced behavioral evidence of tinnitus in blast-exposed rats, all of which accorded with mitigated histopathological evidence of tinnitus-related neuropathy and maladaptive neuroplasticity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7790300PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0243903PLOS

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