首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Transient changes in cochlear potentials and DPOAEs after low-frequency tones: the 'two-minute bounce' revisited
Authors:DL Kirk  RB Patuzzi
Affiliation:Physiology Department, University of Western Australia, Nedlands. dkirk@uniwa.uwa.edu.au
Abstract:After exposure to a loud, non-traumatic low-frequency tone, auditory thresholds are elevated. Thresholds recover to normal in a non-monotonic manner, decreasing rapidly at first before increasing again, until they finally decrease monotonically towards normal. Although the transient elevation of thresholds after the initial improvement was originally called a 'bounce' by Hirsh and Ward (1952), Kemp (1986) suggests that the initial rapid recovery is the oddity: under some conditions a low-frequency tone can produce hypersensitivity in otoacoustic emissions, psychophysical thresholds, and perceived loudness (Kemp's 'bounce') without a later elevation of threshold (Hirsh and Ward's 'bounce'). Kemp also suggested that the transient hypersensitivity was caused by changes in the sensitivity of the active process within the cochlea. We have investigated the origin of this transient hypersensitivity (Kemp's bounce) in guinea pigs, recording cochlear potentials (CM, CAP, SP and EP) and otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs at f2-f1, 2f1-f2, 2f2-2f1 and 3f1-2f2). Our results indicate that the bounce does not require neural activity, but is probably produced by non-neural cochlear mechanisms, possibly a transient decrease in the permeability of the organ of Corti which produces a small but significant change in standing current through outer hair cells. At least part of these changes, which are reduced as the stimulation frequency increases, and absent above 2 kHz, seem due to a small and transient movement of the cochlear partition towards scala tympani, probably due to a transient osmotic imbalance.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号