San Juan Juan, Hu Xiao-Su, Issa Mohamad, Bisconti Silvia, Kovelman Ioulia, Kileny Paul, Basura Gregory
Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, Kresge Hearing Research Inst., The University of Michigan, 1100 W Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
Center for Human Growth and Development, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 12;12(6):e0179150. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179150. eCollection 2017.
Tinnitus, or phantom sound perception, leads to increased spontaneous neural firing rates and enhanced synchrony in central auditory circuits in animal models. These putative physiologic correlates of tinnitus to date have not been well translated in the brain of the human tinnitus sufferer. Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) we recently showed that tinnitus in humans leads to maintained hemodynamic activity in auditory and adjacent, non-auditory cortices. Here we used fNIRS technology to investigate changes in resting state functional connectivity between human auditory and non-auditory brain regions in normal-hearing, bilateral subjective tinnitus and controls before and after auditory stimulation. Hemodynamic activity was monitored over the region of interest (primary auditory cortex) and non-region of interest (adjacent non-auditory cortices) and functional brain connectivity was measured during a 60-second baseline/period of silence before and after a passive auditory challenge consisting of alternating pure tones (750 and 8000Hz), broadband noise and silence. Functional connectivity was measured between all channel-pairs. Prior to stimulation, connectivity of the region of interest to the temporal and fronto-temporal region was decreased in tinnitus participants compared to controls. Overall, connectivity in tinnitus was differentially altered as compared to controls following sound stimulation. Enhanced connectivity was seen in both auditory and non-auditory regions in the tinnitus brain, while controls showed a decrease in connectivity following sound stimulation. In tinnitus, the strength of connectivity was increased between auditory cortex and fronto-temporal, fronto-parietal, temporal, occipito-temporal and occipital cortices. Together these data suggest that central auditory and non-auditory brain regions are modified in tinnitus and that resting functional connectivity measured by fNIRS technology may contribute to conscious phantom sound perception and potentially serve as an objective measure of central neural pathology.
耳鸣,即幻听,在动物模型中会导致中枢听觉回路中自发神经放电率增加以及同步性增强。迄今为止,耳鸣的这些假定生理相关性在人类耳鸣患者的大脑中尚未得到很好的转化。我们最近使用功能近红外光谱技术(fNIRS)表明,人类耳鸣会导致听觉及相邻非听觉皮层的血流动力学活动持续存在。在此,我们使用fNIRS技术研究了正常听力、双侧主观性耳鸣患者以及对照组在听觉刺激前后,听觉与非听觉脑区之间静息态功能连接的变化。在感兴趣区域(初级听觉皮层)和非感兴趣区域(相邻非听觉皮层)监测血流动力学活动,并在由交替纯音(750和8000赫兹)、宽带噪声和静音组成的被动听觉挑战前后的60秒基线/静息期测量脑功能连接。测量所有通道对之间的功能连接。在刺激前,与对照组相比,耳鸣参与者中感兴趣区域与颞叶及额颞区域的连接性降低。总体而言,与对照组相比,耳鸣患者在声音刺激后的连接性发生了不同程度的改变。耳鸣患者的听觉和非听觉区域均出现连接性增强,而对照组在声音刺激后连接性降低。在耳鸣患者中,听觉皮层与额颞、额顶、颞叶、枕颞和枕叶皮层之间的连接强度增加。这些数据共同表明,中枢听觉和非听觉脑区在耳鸣中发生了改变,并且通过fNIRS技术测量的静息功能连接可能有助于有意识的幻听感知,并有可能作为中枢神经病理学的客观指标。