Roxelyn and Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Northwestern University, Frances Searle Building 1-240, 2240 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.
Knowles Hearing Center, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2021 Dec;22(6):659-680. doi: 10.1007/s10162-021-00805-3. Epub 2021 Sep 30.
Age-related hearing loss (ARHL) is a devastating public health issue. To successfully address ARHL using existing and future treatments, it is imperative to detect the earliest signs of age-related auditory decline and understand the mechanisms driving it. Here, we explore early signs of age-related auditory decline by characterizing cochlear function in 199 ears aged 10-65 years, all of which had clinically defined normal hearing (i.e., behavioral thresholds ≤ 25 dB HL from .25 to 8 kHz bilaterally) and no history of noise exposure. We characterized cochlear function by measuring behavioral thresholds in two paradigms (traditional audiometric thresholds from .25 to 8 kHz and Békésy tracking thresholds from .125 to 20 kHz) and distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) growth functions at f = 2, 4, and 8 kHz. Behavioral thresholds through a standard clinical frequency range (up to 8 kHz) showed statistically, but not clinically, significant declines across increasing decades of life. In contrast, DPOAE growth measured in the same frequency range showed clear declines as early 30 years of age, particularly across moderate stimulus levels (L = 25-45 dB SPL). These substantial declines in DPOAE growth were not fully explained by differences in behavioral thresholds measured in the same frequency region. Additionally, high-frequency Békésy tracking thresholds above ~11.2 kHz showed frank declines with increasing age. Collectively, these results suggest that early age-related cochlear decline (1) begins as early as the third or fourth decade of life, (2) is greatest in the cochlear base but apparent through the length of the cochlear partition, (3) cannot be detected fully by traditional clinical measures, and (4) is likely due to a complex mix of etiologies.
年龄相关性听力损失(ARHL)是一个严重的公共卫生问题。为了成功地使用现有的和未来的治疗方法来解决 ARHL,检测与年龄相关的听觉下降的最早迹象并了解其驱动机制是至关重要的。在这里,我们通过研究 199 只年龄在 10-65 岁之间的耳朵的耳蜗功能来探索与年龄相关的听觉下降的早期迹象,所有这些耳朵都具有临床定义的正常听力(即,从.25 到 8 kHz 的双侧行为阈值≤25 dB HL),并且没有噪声暴露史。我们通过测量两种范式(从.25 到 8 kHz 的传统听力阈值和从.125 到 20 kHz 的 Békésy 跟踪阈值)的行为阈值和 f = 2、4 和 8 kHz 的畸变产物耳声发射(DPOAE)生长函数来描述耳蜗功能。通过标准临床频率范围(高达 8 kHz)的行为阈值显示出统计学上但临床上没有显著的随着生命中不断增加的几十年而下降。相比之下,在相同的频率范围内测量的 DPOAE 生长在 30 岁之前就显示出明显的下降,特别是在中等刺激水平(L = 25-45 dB SPL)下。在相同频率区域测量的行为阈值并不能完全解释 DPOAE 生长的这些显著下降。此外,超过约 11.2 kHz 的高频 Békésy 跟踪阈值随着年龄的增长而明显下降。总的来说,这些结果表明,早期的年龄相关性耳蜗下降(1)早在第三或第四个十年就开始,(2)在耳蜗基底最大,但在耳蜗分区的长度上明显,(3)不能完全通过传统的临床测量来检测,(4)可能是由于多种病因的复杂混合。