Dias James W, McClaskey Carolyn M, Alvey April P, Lawson Abigail, Matthews Lois J, Dubno Judy R, Harris Kelly C
Medical University of South Carolina Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery.
bioRxiv. 2024 Apr 10:2024.03.20.585882. doi: 10.1101/2024.03.20.585882.
Auditory nerve (AN) function has been hypothesized to deteriorate with age and noise exposure. Here, we perform a systematic review of published studies and find that the evidence for age-related deficits in AN function is largely consistent across the literature, but there are inconsistent findings among studies of noise exposure history. Further, evidence from animal studies suggests that the greatest deficits in AN response amplitudes are found in noise-exposed aged mice, but a test of the interaction between effects of age and noise exposure on AN function has not been conducted in humans. We report a study of our own examining differences in the response amplitude of the compound action potential N1 (CAP N1) between younger and older adults with and without a self-reported history of noise exposure in a large sample of human participants (63 younger adults 18-30 years of age, 103 older adults 50-86 years of age). CAP N1 response amplitudes were smaller in older than younger adults. Noise exposure history did not appear to predict CAP N1 response amplitudes, nor did the effect of noise exposure history interact with age. We then incorporated our results into two meta-analyses of published studies of age and noise exposure history effects on AN response amplitudes in neurotypical human samples. The meta-analyses found that age effects across studies are robust (r=-0.407), but noise-exposure effects are weak (r=-0.152). We conclude that noise-exposure effects may be highly variable depending on sample characteristics, study design, and statistical approach, and researchers should be cautious when interpreting results. The underlying pathology of age-related and noise-induced changes in AN function are difficult to determine in living humans, creating a need for longitudinal studies of changes in AN function across the lifespan and histological examination of the AN from temporal bones collected post-mortem.
听觉神经(AN)功能被认为会随着年龄增长和噪声暴露而恶化。在此,我们对已发表的研究进行了系统综述,发现关于AN功能与年龄相关缺陷的证据在文献中基本一致,但在噪声暴露史研究中存在不一致的结果。此外,动物研究的证据表明,在噪声暴露的老年小鼠中发现AN反应幅度的最大缺陷,但尚未在人类中进行年龄和噪声暴露对AN功能影响的相互作用测试。我们报告了一项自己的研究,在大量人类参与者样本(63名18 - 30岁的年轻成年人,103名50 - 86岁的老年成年人)中,研究有和没有自我报告噪声暴露史的年轻人和老年人之间复合动作电位N1(CAP N1)反应幅度的差异。老年成年人的CAP N1反应幅度小于年轻成年人。噪声暴露史似乎无法预测CAP N1反应幅度,噪声暴露史的影响也未与年龄相互作用。然后,我们将我们的结果纳入了两项关于年龄和噪声暴露史对神经典型人类样本中AN反应幅度影响的已发表研究的荟萃分析。荟萃分析发现,各研究中的年龄效应是显著的(r = -0.407),但噪声暴露效应较弱(r = -0.152)。我们得出结论,噪声暴露效应可能因样本特征、研究设计和统计方法而高度可变,研究人员在解释结果时应谨慎。在活体人类中很难确定与年龄相关和噪声诱导的AN功能变化的潜在病理,因此需要对AN功能在整个生命周期中的变化进行纵向研究,并对死后收集的颞骨中的AN进行组织学检查。