Abstract

Electrocochleography (ECochG) is a potential clinically valuable technique for predicting speech perception outcomes in cochlear implant (CI) recipients, among other uses. Current analysis is limited by an inability to quantify hair cell and neural contributions which are mixed in the ongoing part of the response to low frequency tones. Here, we used a model based on source properties to account for recorded waveform shapes and to separate the combined signal into its components. The model for the cochlear microphonic (CM) was a sinusoid with parameters for independent saturation of the peaks and the troughs of the responses. The model for the auditory nerve neurophonic (ANN) was the convolution of a unit potential and population cycle histogram with a parameter for spread of excitation. Phases of the ANN and CM were additional parameters. The average cycle from the ongoing response was the input, and adaptive fitting identified CM and ANN parameters that best reproduced the waveform shape. Test datasets were responses recorded from the round windows of CI recipients, from the round window of gerbils before and after application of neurotoxins, and with simulated signals where each parameter could be manipulated in isolation. Waveforms recorded from 284 CI recipients had a variety of morphologies that the model fit with an average r2 of 0.97 ± 0.058 (standard deviation). With simulated signals, small systematic differences between outputs and inputs were seen with some variable combinations, but in general there were limited interactions among the parameters. In gerbils, the CM reported was relatively unaffected by the neurotoxins. In contrast, the ANN was strongly reduced and the reduction was limited to frequencies of 1,000 Hz and lower, consistent with the range of strong neural phase-locking. Across human CI subjects, the ANN contribution was variable, ranging from nearly none to larger than the CM. Development of this model could provide a means to isolate hair cell and neural activity that are mixed in the ongoing response to low-frequency tones. This tool can help characterize the residual physiology across CI subjects, and can be useful in other clinical settings where a description of the cochlear physiology is desirable.

Highlights

  • Electrocochleography is the recording of electrical potentials produced by the cochlea in response to stimulation

  • The model succeeded in capturing the overall shapes of waveforms in cochlear implant (CI) subjects (Figure 4), was affected in generally predicable ways by parametric manipulation of simulated signals (Figures 5, 6), captured aspects of the responses expected after application of neurotoxins in gerbils (Figures 7–10) and provided estimates of the auditory nerve neurophonic (ANN) and cochlear microphonic (CM) in human CI subjects that generally matches that of a subjective estimate of neural activity (Figure 11)

  • It reports a larger CM than ANN, with the major effects of neurotoxins limited to the ANN

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Summary

Introduction

Electrocochleography is the recording of electrical potentials produced by the cochlea in response to stimulation. It has been extensively used to evaluate peripheral auditory system physiology, and is used clinically to identify hydrops in Meniere’s patients and other retrocochlear pathologies (Schmidt et al, 1974; Gibson and Beagley, 1976). It has drawn interest for the study of auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD, Santarelli, 2010; Rance and Starr, 2015). Analysis of the hair cell and neural contributions to ECochG responses recorded in CI recipients is the main objective of this study

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