Translational Neuroscience Facility, School of Medical Sciences, The University of New South Wales, UNSW Kensington Campus, Sydney, NSW Australia.
Hear Res. 2012 Oct;292(1-2):71-9. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2012.08.010. Epub 2012 Aug 28.
Isoflurane is a volatile inhaled anaesthetic widely used in animal research, with particular utility for hearing research. Isoflurane has been shown to blunt hearing sensitivity compared with the awake state, but little is known about how isoflurane compares with other anaesthetics with regard to hair cell transduction and auditory neurotransmission. The current study was undertaken in C57Bl/6J and C129/SvEv strains of mice to determine whether isoflurane anaesthesia affects hearing function relative to ketamine-based anaesthesia. Cochlear function and central auditory transmission were assessed using auditory brainstem response (ABR) and distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE), comparing thresholds and input/output functions over time, for isoflurane vs. ketamine/xylazine/acepromazine anaesthesia. ABR thresholds at the most sensitive region of hearing (16 kHz) were initially higher under isoflurane anaesthesia. This reduced hearing sensitivity worsened over the 1 h study period, and also became evident with broadband click stimulus. Ketamine anaesthesia provided stable ABR thresholds. Although the growth functions were unchanged over time for both anaesthetics, the slopes under isoflurane anaesthesia were significantly less. Cubic (2f(1)-f(2)) DPOAE thresholds and growth functions were initially similar for both anaesthetics. After 60 min, DPOAE thresholds increased for both groups, but this effect was significantly greater with ketamine anaesthesia. The isoflurane-mediated increase in ABR thresholds over time is attributable to action on cochlear nerve activation, evident as a right-shift in the P1-N1 input/output function compared to K/X/A. The ketamine-based anaesthetic produced stable ABR thresholds and gain over time, despite a right-shift in the outer hair cell - mediated DPOAE input/output function.
异氟醚是一种广泛应用于动物研究的挥发性吸入麻醉剂,在听力研究中尤其有用。与清醒状态相比,异氟醚已被证明会使听力敏感度降低,但对于异氟醚与其他麻醉剂在毛细胞转导和听觉神经传递方面的比较,知之甚少。本研究在 C57Bl/6J 和 C129/SvEv 两种小鼠品系中进行,以确定异氟醚麻醉相对于氯胺酮基麻醉是否会影响听力功能。使用听觉脑干反应(ABR)和畸变产物耳声发射(DPOAE)评估耳蜗功能和中枢听觉传递,比较异氟醚与氯胺酮/甲苯噻嗪/乙酰丙嗪麻醉的阈值和输入/输出功能随时间的变化。在最敏感的听力区域(16 kHz),异氟醚麻醉下的 ABR 阈值最初较高。这种听力敏感度的降低在 1 小时的研究期间恶化,并且在宽带点击刺激下也变得明显。氯胺酮麻醉提供稳定的 ABR 阈值。尽管两种麻醉剂的生长函数随时间不变,但异氟醚麻醉下的斜率显著较小。对于两种麻醉剂,立方(2f(1)-f(2))DPOAE 阈值和生长函数最初相似。60 分钟后,两组的 DPOAE 阈值均升高,但氯胺酮麻醉的效果明显更大。随着时间的推移,异氟醚引起的 ABR 阈值增加归因于耳蜗神经激活的作用,与 K/X/A 相比,P1-N1 输入/输出函数的右移明显。尽管外毛细胞介导的 DPOAE 输入/输出功能发生右移,但基于氯胺酮的麻醉在随时间推移产生稳定的 ABR 阈值和增益。