Takacs Joseph D, Forrest Taylor J, Basura Gregory J
Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, Kresge Hearing Research Institute (KHRI), University of Michigan, 1100 W Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States.
Hear Res. 2017 Dec;356:1-15. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2017.07.004. Epub 2017 Jul 13.
We previously demonstrated that bimodal stimulation (spinal trigeminal nucleus [Sp5] paired with best frequency tone) altered neural tone-evoked and spontaneous firing rates (SFRs) in primary auditory cortex (A1) 15 min after pairing in guinea pigs with and without noise-induced tinnitus. Neural responses were enhanced (+10 ms) or suppressed (0 ms) based on the bimodal pairing interval. Here we investigated whether bimodal stimulation leads to long-term (up to 2 h) changes in tone-evoked and SFRs and neural synchrony (correlate of tinnitus) and if the long-term bimodal effects are altered following noise exposure. To obviate the effects of permanent hearing loss on the results, firing rates and neural synchrony were measured three weeks following unilateral (left ear) noise exposure and a temporary threshold shift. Simultaneous extra-cellular single-unit recordings were made from contralateral (to noise) A1 and dorsal rostral belt (RB); an associative auditory cortical region thought to influence A1, before and after bimodal stimulation (pairing intervals of 0 ms; simultaneous Sp5-tone and +10 ms; Sp5 precedes tone). Sixty and 120 min after 0 ms pairing tone-evoked and SFRs were suppressed in sham A1; an effect only preserved 120 min following pairing in noise. Stimulation at +10 ms only affected SFRs 120 min after pairing in sham and noise-exposed A1. Within sham RB, pairing at 0 and +10 ms persistently suppressed tone-evoked and SFRs, while 0 ms pairing in noise markedly enhanced tone-evoked and SFRs up to 2 h. Together, these findings suggest that bimodal stimulation has long-lasting effects in A1 that also extend to the associative RB that is altered by noise and may have persistent implications for how noise damaged brains process multi-sensory information. Moreover, prior to bimodal stimulation, noise damage increased neural synchrony in A1, RB and between A1 and RB neurons. Bimodal stimulation led to persistent changes in neural synchrony in intact A1 and RB that were also altered by noise-exposure. Given that increases in neural synchrony following noise may be consistent with tinnitus onset, these data implicate that both A1 and RB may be involved in the etiology of phantom sound perception. These data also suggest that noise alters the effects of bimodal stimulation on neural synchrony in A1 and RB; an effect that may also lead to changes in tinnitus perception.
我们之前证明,在有或无噪声性耳鸣的豚鼠中,双峰刺激(三叉神经脊束核[Sp5]与最佳频率音调配对)在配对后15分钟改变了初级听觉皮层(A1)中音调诱发的和自发放电率(SFRs)。根据双峰配对间隔,神经反应增强(+10毫秒)或受到抑制(0毫秒)。在这里,我们研究了双峰刺激是否会导致音调诱发反应和SFRs以及神经同步性(耳鸣的相关因素)的长期(长达2小时)变化,以及长期双峰效应在噪声暴露后是否会改变。为了避免永久性听力损失对结果的影响,在单侧(左耳)噪声暴露和暂时性阈移三周后测量放电率和神经同步性。在双峰刺激(配对间隔为0毫秒;Sp5与音调同时出现和+10毫秒;Sp5先于音调)之前和之后,从对侧(相对于噪声)A1和背侧吻侧带(RB)进行同步细胞外单单位记录;RB是一个被认为会影响A1的联合听觉皮层区域。在0毫秒配对后60和120分钟,假手术组A1中的音调诱发反应和SFRs受到抑制;在噪声组中,这种效应仅在配对后120分钟内存在。在+10毫秒进行刺激仅在假手术组和噪声暴露组A1配对后120分钟影响SFRs。在假手术组RB内,0和+10毫秒的配对持续抑制音调诱发反应和SFRs,而在噪声组中,0毫秒配对在长达2小时内显著增强音调诱发反应和SFRs。总之,这些发现表明双峰刺激在A1中具有持久效应,这种效应也扩展到了受噪声改变的联合RB,并且可能对噪声损伤的大脑如何处理多感官信息产生持续影响。此外,在双峰刺激之前,噪声损伤增加了A1、RB以及A1和RB神经元之间的神经同步性。双峰刺激导致完整的A1和RB中的神经同步性发生持续变化,这些变化也因噪声暴露而改变。鉴于噪声后神经同步性的增加可能与耳鸣发作一致,这些数据表明A1和RB都可能参与幻听感知的病因。这些数据还表明噪声改变了双峰刺激对A1和RB中神经同步性的影响;这种效应也可能导致耳鸣感知的变化。