Caspary Donald M, Llano Daniel A
Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL, USA.
Neuroscience Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA; Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Hear Res. 2017 Jun;349:197-207. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2016.08.009. Epub 2016 Aug 21.
Tinnitus is defined as a phantom sound (ringing in the ears), and can significantly reduce the quality of life for those who suffer its effects. Ten to fifteen percent of the general adult population report symptoms of tinnitus with 1-2% reporting that tinnitus negatively impacts their quality of life. Noise exposure is the most common cause of tinnitus and the military environment presents many challenging high-noise situations. Military noise levels can be so intense that standard hearing protection is not adequate. Recent studies suggest a role for inhibitory neurotransmitter dysfunction in response to noise-induced peripheral deafferentation as a key element in the pathology of tinnitus. The auditory thalamus, or medial geniculate body (MGB), is an obligate auditory brain center in a unique position to gate the percept of sound as it projects to auditory cortex and to limbic structures. Both areas are thought to be involved in those individuals most impacted by tinnitus. For MGB, opposing hypotheses have posited either a tinnitus-related pathologic decrease or pathologic increase in GABAergic inhibition. In sensory thalamus, GABA mediates fast synaptic inhibition via synaptic GABA receptors (GABARs) as well as a persistent tonic inhibition via high-affinity extrasynaptic GABARs and slow synaptic inhibition via GABARs. Down-regulation of inhibitory neurotransmission, related to partial peripheral deafferentation, is consistently presented as partially underpinning neuronal hyperactivity seen in animal models of tinnitus. This maladaptive plasticity/Gain Control Theory of tinnitus pathology (see Auerbach et al., 2014; Richardson et al., 2012) is characterized by reduced inhibition associated with increased spontaneous and abnormal neuronal activity, including bursting and increased synchrony throughout much of the central auditory pathway. A competing hypothesis suggests that maladaptive oscillations between the MGB and auditory cortex, thalamocortical dysrhythmia, predict tinnitus pathology (De Ridder et al., 2015). These unusual oscillations/rhythms reflect net increased tonic inhibition in a subset of thalamocortical projection neurons resulting in abnormal bursting. Hyperpolarizing de-inactivation of T-type Ca2+ channels switches thalamocortical projection neurons into burst mode. Thalamocortical dysrhythmia originating in sensory thalamus has been postulated to underpin neuropathies including tinnitus and chronic pain. Here we review the relationship between noise-induced tinnitus and altered inhibition in the MGB.
耳鸣被定义为一种幻听(耳内鸣响),会显著降低受其影响者的生活质量。10%至15%的成年普通人群报告有耳鸣症状,其中1%至2%的人表示耳鸣对他们的生活质量产生负面影响。噪声暴露是耳鸣最常见的原因,而军事环境存在许多具有挑战性的高噪声情况。军事噪声水平可能非常强烈,以至于标准的听力保护措施并不足够。最近的研究表明,抑制性神经递质功能障碍在应对噪声诱导的外周去传入方面发挥作用,这是耳鸣病理学的一个关键因素。听觉丘脑,即内侧膝状体(MGB),是一个专门的听觉脑中枢,处于独特的位置来调节声音的感知,因为它投射到听觉皮层和边缘结构。这两个区域被认为与受耳鸣影响最大的个体有关。对于MGB,相反的假说是,与耳鸣相关的病理变化要么是GABA能抑制的病理性降低,要么是病理性增加。在感觉丘脑中,GABA通过突触GABA受体(GABARs)介导快速突触抑制,通过高亲和力突触外GABARs介导持续性强直抑制,通过GABARs介导缓慢突触抑制。与部分外周去传入相关的抑制性神经传递下调,一直被认为是耳鸣动物模型中神经元活动亢进的部分原因。这种耳鸣病理学的适应不良可塑性/增益控制理论(见奥尔巴赫等人,2014年;理查森等人,2012年)的特征是抑制减少,同时自发和异常神经元活动增加,包括在整个中枢听觉通路的大部分区域出现爆发和同步性增加。另一种竞争性假说认为,MGB和听觉皮层之间的适应不良振荡,即丘脑皮层节律失调,预示着耳鸣病理学(德里德等人,2015年)。这些异常振荡/节律反映了丘脑皮层投射神经元子集中强直抑制的净增加,导致异常爆发。T型Ca2+通道的超极化去失活将丘脑皮层投射神经元转换为爆发模式。起源于感觉丘脑的丘脑皮层节律失调被认为是包括耳鸣和慢性疼痛在内的神经病变的基础。在这里,我们综述了噪声诱导的耳鸣与MGB中抑制改变之间的关系。