Fallon James B, Shepherd Robert K, Nayagam David A X, Wise Andrew K, Heffer Leon F, Landry Thomas G, Irvine Dexter R F
Bionics Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Otolaryngology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Medical Bionics Department, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Bionics Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Otolaryngology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Medical Bionics Department, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Hear Res. 2014 Sep;315:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2014.06.001. Epub 2014 Jun 14.
We have previously shown that neonatal deafness of 7-13 months duration leads to loss of cochleotopy in the primary auditory cortex (AI) that can be reversed by cochlear implant use. Here we describe the effects of a similar duration of deafness and cochlear implant use on temporal processing. Specifically, we compared the temporal resolution of neurons in AI of young adult normal-hearing cats that were acutely deafened and implanted immediately prior to recording with that in three groups of neonatally deafened cats. One group of neonatally deafened cats received no chronic stimulation. The other two groups received up to 8 months of either low- or high-rate (50 or 500 pulses per second per electrode, respectively) stimulation from a clinical cochlear implant, initiated at 10 weeks of age. Deafness of 7-13 months duration had no effect on the duration of post-onset response suppression, latency, latency jitter, or the stimulus repetition rate at which units responded maximally (best repetition rate), but resulted in a statistically significant reduction in the ability of units to respond to every stimulus in a train (maximum following rate). None of the temporal response characteristics of the low-rate group differed from those in acutely deafened controls. In contrast, high-rate stimulation had diverse effects: it resulted in decreased suppression duration, longer latency and greater jitter relative to all other groups, and an increase in best repetition rate and cut-off rate relative to acutely deafened controls. The minimal effects of moderate-duration deafness on temporal processing in the present study are in contrast to its previously-reported pronounced effects on cochleotopy. Much longer periods of deafness have been reported to result in significant changes in temporal processing, in accord with the fact that duration of deafness is a major factor influencing outcome in human cochlear implantees.
我们之前已经表明,持续7 - 13个月的新生儿耳聋会导致初级听觉皮层(AI)中耳蜗拓扑结构的丧失,而使用人工耳蜗可以逆转这种情况。在此,我们描述了类似持续时间的耳聋及人工耳蜗使用对时间处理的影响。具体而言,我们比较了在记录前急性致聋并立即植入人工耳蜗的年轻成年听力正常猫的AI中神经元的时间分辨率,与三组新生儿期致聋猫的情况。一组新生儿期致聋猫未接受长期刺激。另外两组在10周龄时开始接受来自临床人工耳蜗的长达8个月的低速率或高速率(分别为每个电极每秒50或500个脉冲)刺激。持续7 - 13个月的耳聋对起始后反应抑制的持续时间、潜伏期、潜伏期抖动或单位反应最大时的刺激重复率(最佳重复率)没有影响,但导致单位对一串刺激中每个刺激做出反应的能力(最大跟随率)在统计学上显著降低。低速率组的时间反应特征与急性致聋对照组相比没有差异。相比之下,高速率刺激产生了多种影响:与所有其他组相比,它导致抑制持续时间缩短、潜伏期延长和抖动更大,并且与急性致聋对照组相比,最佳重复率和截止率增加。本研究中中度持续时间耳聋对时间处理的最小影响与其先前报道的对耳蜗拓扑结构的显著影响形成对比。据报道,更长时间的耳聋会导致时间处理的显著变化,这与耳聋持续时间是影响人类人工耳蜗植入者结果的主要因素这一事实相符。