Triana R J, Suits G W, Garrison S, Prazma J, Brechtelsbauer P B, Michaelis O E, Pillsbury H C
Division of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill.
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1991 Jun;117(6):635-40. doi: 10.1001/archotol.1991.01870180071014.
The association between diabetes mellitus and hearing impairment has been debated in many previous studies. The spontaneous hypertensive/NIH-corpulent (SHR/N-cp) rat has been shown to be a unique genetic model for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Seventeen diabetic and 17 control young male rats were divided into groups according to diet and phenotype. The rats were fed either 54% of sucrose or 54% starch diets for 3.5 months and killed at 5 months. The cochleas were fixed, decalcified, dissected, and stained for hair cell counting. A significant loss of outer hair cells was noted in the diabetic obese (SHR/N-cp) animals when compared with the control obese (LA/N-cp) animals in every group. Although no significant difference was noted between the diabetic obese (SHR/N-cp) animals receiving the starch and sugar diets, the diabetic obese (SHR/N-cp) animals were more severely affected than the nondiabetic lean (SHR/N-cp) rats.