Statins protect mice from high-decibel noise-induced hearing loss

No medical interventions for noise induced hearing loss (NIHL) are approved by the Food and Drug Administration (USA). Here, we evaluate statins in CBA/CaJ mice as potential drugs for hearing loss. Direct delivery of fluvastatin to the cochlea and oral delivery of lovastatin were evaluated. Baseline...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy 2023-07, Vol.163, p.114674-114674, Article 114674
Hauptverfasser: Dépreux, Frédéric, Czech, Lyubov, Young, Hunter, Richter, Claus-Peter, Zhou, Yingjie, Whitlon, Donna S.
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container_start_page 114674
container_title Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy
container_volume 163
creator Dépreux, Frédéric
Czech, Lyubov
Young, Hunter
Richter, Claus-Peter
Zhou, Yingjie
Whitlon, Donna S.
description No medical interventions for noise induced hearing loss (NIHL) are approved by the Food and Drug Administration (USA). Here, we evaluate statins in CBA/CaJ mice as potential drugs for hearing loss. Direct delivery of fluvastatin to the cochlea and oral delivery of lovastatin were evaluated. Baseline hearing was assessed using Auditory Brain Stem Responses (ABRs). For fluvastatin, a cochleostomy was surgically created in the basal turn of the cochlea by a novel, laser-based procedure, through which a catheter attached to a mini-osmotic pump was inserted. The pump was filled with a solution of 50 µM fluvastatin+carrier or with the carrier alone for continuous delivery to the cochlea. Mice were exposed to one octave band noise (8–16 kHz x 2 h x 110 dB SPL). In our past work with guinea pigs, fluvastatin protected in the contralateral cochlea. In this study in CBA/CaJ mice, hearing was also assessed in the contralateral cochlea 1–4 weeks after noise exposure. At two weeks post exposure, ABR thresholds at 4, 8, 12, 16, and 32 kHz were elevated, as expected, in the noise+carrier alone treated mice by approximately 9-, 17-, 41-, 29-, and 34-dB, respectively. Threshold elevations were smaller in mice treated with noise+fluvastatin to about 2-, 6-, 20-,12- and 12-dB respectively. Survival of inner hair cell synapses were not protected by fluvastatin over these frequencies. Lovastatin delivered by gavage showed lower threshold shifts than with carrier alone. These data show that direct and oral statin delivery protects mice against NIHL. [Display omitted] •High decibel noise exposure causes noise induced hearing loss.•Cochlear infused fluvastatin protects mice from noise induced hearing loss.•Lovastatin, delivered orally by gavage, protects mice from noise induced hearing loss.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biopha.2023.114674
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Here, we evaluate statins in CBA/CaJ mice as potential drugs for hearing loss. Direct delivery of fluvastatin to the cochlea and oral delivery of lovastatin were evaluated. Baseline hearing was assessed using Auditory Brain Stem Responses (ABRs). For fluvastatin, a cochleostomy was surgically created in the basal turn of the cochlea by a novel, laser-based procedure, through which a catheter attached to a mini-osmotic pump was inserted. The pump was filled with a solution of 50 µM fluvastatin+carrier or with the carrier alone for continuous delivery to the cochlea. Mice were exposed to one octave band noise (8–16 kHz x 2 h x 110 dB SPL). In our past work with guinea pigs, fluvastatin protected in the contralateral cochlea. In this study in CBA/CaJ mice, hearing was also assessed in the contralateral cochlea 1–4 weeks after noise exposure. At two weeks post exposure, ABR thresholds at 4, 8, 12, 16, and 32 kHz were elevated, as expected, in the noise+carrier alone treated mice by approximately 9-, 17-, 41-, 29-, and 34-dB, respectively. Threshold elevations were smaller in mice treated with noise+fluvastatin to about 2-, 6-, 20-,12- and 12-dB respectively. Survival of inner hair cell synapses were not protected by fluvastatin over these frequencies. Lovastatin delivered by gavage showed lower threshold shifts than with carrier alone. These data show that direct and oral statin delivery protects mice against NIHL. 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At two weeks post exposure, ABR thresholds at 4, 8, 12, 16, and 32 kHz were elevated, as expected, in the noise+carrier alone treated mice by approximately 9-, 17-, 41-, 29-, and 34-dB, respectively. Threshold elevations were smaller in mice treated with noise+fluvastatin to about 2-, 6-, 20-,12- and 12-dB respectively. Survival of inner hair cell synapses were not protected by fluvastatin over these frequencies. Lovastatin delivered by gavage showed lower threshold shifts than with carrier alone. These data show that direct and oral statin delivery protects mice against NIHL. 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subjects ABR
Cochlea
Hair cells
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor
Noise-induced hearing loss
Synapses
title Statins protect mice from high-decibel noise-induced hearing loss
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