Intense noise exposure alters peripheral vestibular structures and physiology

The otolith organs play a critical role in detecting linear acceleration and gravity to control posture and balance. Some afferents that innervate these structures can be activated by sound and are at risk for noise overstimulation. A previous report demonstrated that noise exposure can abolish vest...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurophysiology 2020-02, Vol.123 (2), p.658-669
Hauptverfasser: Stewart, C E, Bauer, D S, Kanicki, A C, Altschuler, R A, King, W M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The otolith organs play a critical role in detecting linear acceleration and gravity to control posture and balance. Some afferents that innervate these structures can be activated by sound and are at risk for noise overstimulation. A previous report demonstrated that noise exposure can abolish vestibular short-latency evoked potential (VsEP) responses and damage calyceal terminals. However, the stimuli that were used to elicit responses were weaker than those established in previous studies and may have been insufficient to elicit VsEP responses in noise-exposed animals. The goal of this study was to determine the effect of an established noise exposure paradigm on VsEP responses using large head-jerk stimuli to determine if noise induces a stimulus threshold shift and/or if large head-jerks are capable of evoking VsEP responses in noise-exposed rats. An additional goal is to relate these measurements to the number of calyceal terminals and hair cells present in noise-exposed vs. non-noise-exposed tissue. Exposure to intense continuous noise significantly reduced VsEP responses to large stimuli and abolished VsEP responses to small stimuli. This finding confirms that while measurable VsEP responses can be elicited from noise-lesioned rat sacculi, larger head-jerk stimuli are required, suggesting a shift in the minimum stimulus necessary to evoke the VsEP. Additionally, a reduction in labeled calyx-only afferent terminals was observed without a concomitant reduction in the overall number of calyces or hair cells. This finding supports a critical role of calretinin-expressing calyceal-only afferents in the generation of a VsEP response. This study identifies a change in the minimum stimulus necessary to evoke vestibular short-latency evoked potential (VsEP) responses after noise-induced damage to the vestibular periphery and reduced numbers of calretinin-labeled calyx-only afferent terminals in the striolar region of the sacculus. These data suggest that a single intense noise exposure may impact synaptic function in calyx-only terminals in the striolar region of the sacculus. Reduced calretinin immunolabeling may provide insight into the mechanism underlying noise-induced changes in VsEP responses.
ISSN:0022-3077
1522-1598
1522-1598
DOI:10.1152/jn.00642.2019