Ma Wei-Li Diana, Young Eric D
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Center for Hearing and Balance, Johns Hopkins University, 505 Traylor Research Building, 720 Rutland Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21205-2109, USA.
Hear Res. 2006 Jun-Jul;216-217:176-88. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2006.03.011. Epub 2006 Apr 19.
Recordings from single neurons in the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) of unanesthetized (decerebrate) cats were done to characterize the effects of acoustic trauma. Trauma was produced by a 250 Hz band of noise centered at 10 kHz, presented at 105-120 dB SPL for 4h. After a one-month recovery period, neurons were recorded in the DCN. The threshold shift, determined from compound action-potential audiograms, showed a sharp threshold elevation of about 60 dB at BFs above an edge frequency of 5-10 kHz. The response maps of neurons with best frequencies (BFs) above the edge did not show the typical organization of excitatory and inhibitory areas seen in the DCN of unexposed animals. Instead, neurons showed no response to sound, weak responses that were hard to tune and characterize, or "tail" responses, consisting of broadly-tuned, predominantly excitatory responses, with a roughly low-pass shape similar to the tuning curves of auditory nerve fibers with similar threshold shifts. In some tail responses whose BFs were near the edge of the threshold elevation, a second weak high-frequency response was seen that suggests convergence of auditory nerve inputs with widely separated BFs on these cells. Spontaneous rates among neurons with elevated thresholds were not increased over those in populations of principal neurons in unexposed animals.
对未麻醉(去大脑)猫的背侧耳蜗核(DCN)中的单个神经元进行记录,以表征声损伤的影响。损伤由以10kHz为中心的250Hz噪声带产生,以105 - 120dB SPL呈现4小时。经过一个月的恢复期后,在DCN中记录神经元。由复合动作电位听力图确定的阈值偏移显示,在高于5 - 10kHz边缘频率的最佳频率(BF)处,阈值急剧升高约60dB。最佳频率高于该边缘的神经元的反应图未显示出在未暴露动物的DCN中所见的典型的兴奋性和抑制性区域组织。相反,神经元对声音无反应、反应微弱难以调谐和表征,或出现“拖尾”反应,即由广泛调谐、主要为兴奋性的反应组成,具有大致低通形状,类似于具有相似阈值偏移的听神经纤维的调谐曲线。在一些最佳频率接近阈值升高边缘的拖尾反应中,可见第二个微弱的高频反应,这表明具有广泛分离的最佳频率的听神经输入在这些细胞上汇聚。阈值升高的神经元的自发发放率并未高于未暴露动物的主要神经元群体。