Signs of noise-induced neural degeneration in humans

Authors

  • Pernille Holtegaard Hearing Systems, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
  • Steen Østergaard Olsen Research Laboratory, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Animal studies demonstrated that noise exposure causes a primary and selective loss of auditory-nerve fibres with low spontaneous firing rate. This neuronal impairment, if also present in humans, can be assumed to affect the processing of supra-threshold stimuli, especially in the presence of background noise, while leaving the processing of low-level stimuli unaffected. The purpose of this study was to investigate if signs of such primary neural damage from noise-exposure could also be found in noise-exposed human individuals. It was investigated: (1) if noise-exposed listeners with hearing thresholds within the “normal” range perform poorer, in terms of their speech recognition threshold in noise (SRTN), and (2) if auditory brainstem responses (ABR) reveal lower amplitude of wave I in the noise-exposed listeners. A test group of noise/music-exposed individuals and a control group were recruited. All subjects were between 18-32 years of age and had pure-tone thresholds ≤ 15 dB HL from 250-8000 Hz. Despite normal pure-tone thresholds, the noise-exposed listeners required a significantly better signal-to-noise ratio to obtain SRTN, compared to the control group. The ABR results showed significantly lower amplitude of wave I, in the left-ear, of the test group listeners. Significantly higher wave III and normal wave V were also found in the left ear of the test group listeners suggesting a compensated neural gain in the brainstem. Overall, the results from this study seem to suggest that noise exposure affects supra-threshold processing in humans before pure-tone sensitivity, raising suspicion to the hypothesis of primary neural involvement.

References

Axelsson, A. and Ringdahl, A. (1989). “Tinnitus – A study of its prevalence and characteristics,” Br. J. Audiol., 23, 53-62.

Bidelman, G.M. and Bhagat, S.P. (2015). “Right-ear advantage drives the link between olivocochlear efferent ‘antimasking’ and speech-in-noise listening benefits,” NeuroReport, 26, 483-487

Costalupes, J.A., Young, E.D., and Gibson, D.J. (1984). “Effects of continuous noise backgrounds on rate response auditory nerve fibers in cat,” J. Neurophysiol., 51, 1326-1344.

Furman, A.C., Kujawa, S.G., and Liberman M.C. (2013). “Noise induced cochlear neuropathy is selective for fibers with low spontaneous rates,” J. Neurophysiol., 110, 577-586.

Hickox, A.E. and Liberman, M.C. (2014). “Is noise-induced cochlear neuropathy key to the generation of hyperacusis or tinnitus?” J. Neurophysiol., 111, 552-564.

Knipper, M., Dijk, P.V., Nunes, I., Rüttiger, L., and Zimmermann, U. (2013). “Advances in the neurobiology of hearing disorder: Recent developments regarding the basis of tinnitus and hyperacusis,” Prog. Neurobiol., 111, 17-33.

Kujawa, S.G. and Liberman, M.C. (2009). “Adding insult to injury: Cochlear nerve degeneration after “temporary” noise-induced hearing loss,” J. Neurosci., 29, 14077-14085.

Lawner, B.E., Harding, G.W., and Bohne, B.A. (1997). “Time course of nerve-fiber regeneration in the noise damaged mammalian cochlea,” Int. J. Dev. Neurosci., 15, 601-617.

Liberman, M.C. (1978). “Auditory-nerve response from cats raised in a low-noise chamber,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 63, 442-455.

Lin, H.W., Furman, A.C., Kujawa, S.G., and Liberman, M.C. (2011). “Primary neural degeneration in the guinea pig cochlea after reversible noise-induced threshold shift,” J. Assoc. Res. Otolaryngol., 12, 605-616.

Maison, S.F., Usubuchi, H., and Liberman, M.C. (2013). “Efferent feedback minimizes cochlear neuropathy from moderate noise exposure,” J. Neurosci., 33, 5542-5552.

Micheyl, C., Khalfa, S., Perrot, X., and Collet, L., (1997). “Difference in cochlear efferent activity between musicians and non-musicians,” NeuroReport, 8, 1047-1050.

Palmer, K.T., Griffin, M.J., Syddall, H.E., Davis, A., Pannett, B., and Coggon, D. (2002). “Occupational exposure to noise and the attributable burden of hearing difficulties in Great Britain,” Occup. Environ. Med., 59, 634-639.

Pirilä, T. (1991). “Left-right asymmetry in the human response to experimental noise exposure: II. Pre-exposure hearing threshold and temporary threshold shift at 4 kHz frequency;” Acta Otolaryngol., 111, 861-866.

Schaette, R. and McAlpine, D. (2011). “Tinnitus with a normal audiogram: Physiological evidence for hidden hearing loss and computational model,” Eur. J. Neurosci., 23, 3124-3138.

Spoendlin, H. (1971). “Primary structural changes in the organ of corti after acoustic overstimulation,” Acta Otolaryngol., 71, 166-176.

Taberner, A.M. and Liberman, M.C. (2005). “Response properties of single auditory nerve fibers in the mouse,” J. Neurophysiol., 93, 557-569.

Zhao, F. and Stephens, D. (1996). “Hearing complaints of patients with King-Kopetzky Syndrome (obscure auditory dysfunction),” Br. J. Audiol., 30, 397-402.

Wagener, K., Josvassen, J.L., and Ardenkjaer, R. (2003). ”Design, optimization and evaluation of a Danish sentence test in noise,” Int. J. Audiol., 42, 10-17.

Downloads

Published

2015-12-15

How to Cite

Holtegaard, P., & Olsen, S. Østergaard. (2015). Signs of noise-induced neural degeneration in humans. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Auditory and Audiological Research, 5, 117–124. Retrieved from https://proceedings.isaar.eu/index.php/isaarproc/article/view/2015-14

Issue

Section

2015/2. Hidden hearing loss: Neural degeneration in "normal" hearing