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Review
. 2013 Dec:111:17-33.
doi: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2013.08.002. Epub 2013 Sep 6.

Advances in the neurobiology of hearing disorders: recent developments regarding the basis of tinnitus and hyperacusis

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Free article
Review

Advances in the neurobiology of hearing disorders: recent developments regarding the basis of tinnitus and hyperacusis

Marlies Knipper et al. Prog Neurobiol. 2013 Dec.
Free article

Abstract

The prevalence of hearing problems in the Western world has, due to aging of the population, doubled over the past 30 years. Thereby, noise-induced hearing loss is an important factor that worsens over time in addition to age-related hearing loss. Hearing loss is usually measured as an elevation of a person's hearing thresholds, expressed in decibel (dB). However, recent animal studies have unraveled a type of permanent cochlear damage, without an elevation of hearing thresholds. This subtle damage is linked to a permanent and progressive degeneration of auditory fibers that occurs in association with damage of the inner hair cell synapse. Afferent neuronal degeneration has been suggested to be involved in hyperacusis (over sensitivity to sound) and tinnitus (a phantom sound percept). Hyperacusis and tinnitus are potentially devastating conditions that are still incurable. The main risk factors to develop tinnitus or hyperacusis are hearing loss, social stress and age. Both tinnitus and hyperacusis have been discussed in the context of a pathological increased response gain in subcortical brain regions as a reaction to deprivation of sensory input. Novel studies confirm the involvement of peripheral deafferentation for tinnitus and hyperacusis, but suggest that the disorder results from different brain responses to different degrees of deafferentation: while tinnitus may arise as a failure of the brain to adapt to deprived peripheral input, hyperacusis may result from an 'over-adaptive' increase in response gain. Moreover, moderate and high stress levels at the time of acoustic trauma have been suggested to play a pivotal role in the vulnerability of the cochlea to acoustic damage and therefore for the development of tinnitus and hyperacusis.

Keywords: ABR; AC; AN; Arc/Arg3.1; BLA; CN; DCN; DPOAE; HPA axis; Homeostatic adaptation; Hyperacusis; IC; IHC; MGB; MNTB; NIHL; Noise-induced hearing loss; OHC; SOC; SR; Social stress; Tinnitus; VCN; activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein/activity-regulated gene 3.1; auditory brainstem response; auditory cortex; auditory nerve; basolateral amygdala; cochlear nucleus; distortion product otoacoustic emission; dorsal cochlear nucleus; fMRI; functional magnetic resonance imaging; hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis; inferior colliculus; inner hair cell; medial geniculate body; medial nucleus of the trapezoid body; noise-induced hearing loss; outer hair cell; spontaneous (discharge) rate; superior olivary complex; ventral cochlear nucleus.

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