Syka Josef
Institute of Experimental Medicine, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic.
Physiol Rev. 2002 Jul;82(3):601-36. doi: 10.1152/physrev.00002.2002.
Traditionally the auditory system was considered a hard-wired sensory system; this view has been challenged in recent years in light of the plasticity of other sensory systems, particularly the visual and somatosensory systems. Practical experience in clinical audiology together with the use of prosthetic devices, such as cochlear implants, contributed significantly to the present view on the plasticity of the central auditory system, which was originally based on data obtained in animal experiments. The loss of auditory receptors, the hair cells, results in profound changes in the structure and function of the central auditory system, typically demonstrated by a reorganization of the projection maps in the auditory cortex. These plastic changes occur not only as a consequence of mechanical lesions of the cochlea or biochemical lesions of the hair cells by ototoxic drugs, but also as a consequence of the loss of hair cells in connection with aging or noise exposure. In light of the aging world population and the increasing amount of noise in the modern world, understanding the plasticity of the central auditory system has its practical consequences and urgency. In most of these situations, a common denominator of central plastic changes is a deterioration of inhibition in the subcortical auditory nuclei and the auditory cortex. In addition to the processes that are elicited by decreased or lost receptor function, the function of nerve cells in the adult central auditory system may dynamically change in the process of learning. A better understanding of the plastic changes in the central auditory system after sensory deafferentation, sensory stimulation, and learning may contribute significantly to improvement in the rehabilitation of damaged or lost auditory function and consequently to improved speech processing and production.
传统上,听觉系统被认为是一个固定连接的感觉系统;近年来,鉴于其他感觉系统(尤其是视觉和体感系统)的可塑性,这一观点受到了挑战。临床听力学的实践经验以及人工耳蜗等假体装置的使用,对目前关于中枢听觉系统可塑性的观点有很大贡献,该观点最初基于动物实验获得的数据。听觉感受器(毛细胞)的丧失会导致中枢听觉系统的结构和功能发生深刻变化,这通常表现为听觉皮层投射图谱的重新组织。这些可塑性变化不仅是耳蜗机械性损伤或耳毒性药物对毛细胞的生化损伤的结果,也是与衰老或噪声暴露相关的毛细胞丧失的结果。鉴于世界人口老龄化以及现代世界中噪声的增加,了解中枢听觉系统的可塑性具有实际意义和紧迫性。在大多数这些情况下,中枢可塑性变化的一个共同特征是皮层下听觉核团和听觉皮层抑制作用的减弱。除了由受体功能降低或丧失引发的过程外,成年中枢听觉系统中神经细胞的功能在学习过程中可能会动态变化。更好地理解感觉传入丧失、感觉刺激和学习后中枢听觉系统的可塑性变化,可能会对受损或丧失的听觉功能的康复改善有很大帮助,从而改善语音处理和产生能力。