Abdala Carolina, Ortmann Amanda J, Shera Christopher A
Auditory Research Center, Caruso Department of Otolaryngology, University of Southern California, 1640 Marengo Street, Suite 346, Los Angeles, CA, 90033, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2018 Oct;19(5):493-510. doi: 10.1007/s10162-018-0680-x. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Previous research on distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) components has hinted at possible differences in the effect of aging on the two basic types of OAEs: those generated by a reflection mechanism in the cochlea and those created by nonlinear distortion (Abdala and Dhar in J Assoc Res Otolaryngol 13:403-421, 2012). This initial work led to the hypothesis that micromechanical irregularity ("roughness") increases in the aging cochlea, perhaps as the result of natural tissue degradation. Increased roughness would boost the backscattering of traveling waves (i.e., reflection emissions) while minimally impacting DPOAEs. To study the relational effect of aging on both types of emissions and address our hypothesis of its origin, we measured reflection- and distortion-type OAEs in 77 human subjects aged 18-76 years. The stimulus-frequency OAE (SFOAE), a reflection emission, and the distortion component of the DPOAE, a nonlinear distortion emission, were recorded at multiple stimulus levels across a four-octave range in all ears. Although the levels of both OAE types decreased with age, the rate of decline in OAE level was consistently greater for DPOAEs than for SFOAEs; that is, SFOAEs are relatively preserved with advancing age. Multiple regression analyses and other controls indicate that aging per se, and not hearing loss, drives this effect. Furthermore, SFOAE generation was simulated using computational modeling to explore the origin of this result. Increasing the amount of mechanical irregularity with age produced an enhancement of SFOAE levels, providing support for the hypothesis that increased intra-cochlear roughness during aging may preserve SFOAE levels. The characteristic aging effect-relatively preserved reflection-emission levels combined with more markedly reduced distortion-emission levels-indicates that SFOAE magnitudes in elderly individuals depend on more than simply the gain of the cochlear amplifier. This relative pattern of OAE decline with age may provide a diagnostic marker for aging-related changes in the cochlea.
先前关于畸变产物耳声发射(DPOAE)成分的研究暗示,衰老对两种基本类型耳声发射的影响可能存在差异:一种是由耳蜗中的反射机制产生的,另一种是由非线性畸变产生的(阿卜杜拉和达尔,《耳鼻咽喉研究学会杂志》,2012年,第13卷,第403 - 421页)。这项初步研究得出一个假设,即随着耳蜗自然组织退化,衰老过程中耳蜗微机械不规则性(“粗糙度”)增加。粗糙度增加会增强行波的反向散射(即反射性耳声发射),而对DPOAE的影响最小。为了研究衰老对这两种耳声发射的相关影响,并验证我们关于其起源的假设,我们对77名年龄在18至76岁的人类受试者进行了反射型和畸变型耳声发射测量。在所有耳朵中,跨越四个倍频程范围,在多个刺激水平下记录刺激频率耳声发射(SFOAE,一种反射性耳声发射)和DPOAE的畸变成分(一种非线性畸变耳声发射)。尽管两种耳声发射类型的水平都随年龄下降,但DPOAE的耳声发射水平下降速率始终比SFOAE更快;也就是说,随着年龄增长,SFOAE相对得以保留。多元回归分析和其他对照表明,是衰老本身而非听力损失导致了这种效应。此外,利用计算模型模拟了SFOAE的产生,以探究这一结果的起源。随着年龄增长增加机械不规则性的量会使SFOAE水平增强,这为衰老过程中耳蜗内粗糙度增加可能保留SFOAE水平这一假设提供了支持。特征性的衰老效应——相对保留的反射性耳声发射水平与更显著降低的畸变发射水平相结合——表明老年人的SFOAE大小不仅仅取决于耳蜗放大器的增益。这种耳声发射随年龄下降的相对模式可能为耳蜗中与衰老相关的变化提供一个诊断标志物。