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Wiley InterScience

European Journal of Neuroscience

European Journal of Neuroscience

Volume 26 Issue 2, Pages 510 - 522

Published Online: 23 Jul 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd



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Deafness alters auditory nerve fibre responses to cochlear implant stimulation
David J. Sly 1,2 , Leon F. Heffer 1,2 , Mark W. White 3 , Robert K. Shepherd 1,2 , Michael G. J. Birch 1 , Ricki L. Minter 2 , Niles E. Nelson 2 , Andrew K. Wise 1 and Stephen J. O'Leary 1,2
  1 The Bionic Ear Institute, Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia
  2 Department of Otolaryngology, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria 3002, Australia
  3 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA
Correspondence to Dr S. J. O'Leary, Department of Otolaryngology, The University of Melbourne, 32 Gisborne Street, East Melbourne, Victoria 3002, Australia.
E-mail: sjoleary@unimelb.edu.au
Copyright The Authors (2007). Journal Compilation Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
electrical stimulation • guinea pig • hearing loss • neurodegeneration • spiral ganglion

ABSTRACT

Here we characterized the relationship between duration of sensorineural hearing loss and the response of the auditory nerve to electrical stimulus rate. Electrophysiological recordings were made from undeafened guinea pigs and those ototoxically deafened for either 5 weeks or 6 months. Auditory neuron survival decreased significantly with the duration of deafness. Extracellular recordings were made from auditory nerve fibres responding to biphasic, charge-balanced current pulses delivered at rates of 20 and 200 pulses/s via a monopolar scala tympani stimulating electrode. The response to 20 pulses/s electrical stimulation of the deafened cochlea exhibited a decrease in spike latency, unaltered temporal jitter and unaltered dynamic range (of nerve firing rate against stimulus current), and a reduction in threshold after 6 months of deafness. The response to a 200-pulse/s stimulus was similar except that the dynamic range was greater than with 20 pulses/s and was also greater in deafened animals than in undeafened animals. Deafness and pulse rate are related; in deaf animals spike recovery appears to be complete between successive stimulus pulses at a low rate (20 pulses/s), but incomplete between pulses at a moderate pulse rate (200 pulses/s). These results suggest that changes in the function of individual auditory nerve fibres after deafness may affect clinical responses during high-rate stimulation such as that used in contemporary speech processing strategies, but not during lower rate stimulation such as that used to record evoked potentials.


Received 13 December 2006, revised 26 May 2007, accepted 4 June 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1460-9568.2007.05678.x About DOI

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