Skoe Erika, Tufts Jennifer
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA; Department of Psychological Sciences, Cognitive Sciences Program, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA; Connecticut Institute for Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA.
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA; Connecticut Institute for Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA.
Hear Res. 2018 Apr;361:80-91. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2018.01.005. Epub 2018 Jan 11.
Exposure to loud sound places the auditory system at considerable risk, especially when the exposure is routine. The current study examined the impact of routine auditory overexposure in young human adults with clinically-normal audiometric thresholds by measuring the auditory brainstem response (ABR), an electrophysiological measure of peripheral and central auditory processing. Sound exposure was measured objectively with body-worn noise dosimeters over a week. Participants were divided into low-exposure and high-exposure groups, with the low-exposure group having an average daily noise exposure dose of ∼11% of the recommended exposure limit compared to the high-exposure group average of nearly 500%. Compared to the low-exposure group, the high-exposure group had delayed ABRs to suprathreshold click stimuli and this prolongation was evident at ABR waves I and III but strongest for V. When peripheral differences were corrected using the I-V interpeak latency, the high-exposure group showed greater taxation at faster stimulus presentation rates than the low-exposure group, suggestive of neural conduction inefficiencies within central auditory structures. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that auditory overexposure affects peripheral and central auditory structures even before changes are evident on standard audiometry. We discuss our findings within the context of the larger debate on the mechanisms and manifestations of subclinical hearing loss.
暴露于高强度声音会使听觉系统面临相当大的风险,尤其是当这种暴露是日常性的时候。当前的研究通过测量听觉脑干反应(ABR)来检测日常听觉过度暴露对听力阈值临床正常的年轻成年人的影响,ABR是一种用于测量外周和中枢听觉处理的电生理指标。使用佩戴在身上的噪声剂量计客观地测量一周内的声音暴露情况。参与者被分为低暴露组和高暴露组,低暴露组的平均每日噪声暴露剂量约为推荐暴露限值的11%,而高暴露组的平均剂量接近500%。与低暴露组相比,高暴露组对阈上短声刺激的ABR潜伏期延迟,这种延长在ABR波I和III时明显,但在波V时最为显著。当使用I-V峰间期校正外周差异时,高暴露组在更快的刺激呈现速率下比低暴露组表现出更大的负荷,这表明中枢听觉结构内的神经传导效率低下。我们的研究结果与以下假设一致:即使在标准听力测试中尚未出现明显变化之前,听觉过度暴露就会影响外周和中枢听觉结构。我们将在关于亚临床听力损失的机制和表现的更大辩论背景下讨论我们的研究结果。