Abstract

This study tested hypothesized relationships between noise exposure and auditory deficits. Both retrospective assessment of potential associations between noise exposure history and performance on an audiologic test battery and prospective assessment of potential changes in performance after new recreational noise exposure were completed.Methods: 32 participants (13M, 19F) with normal hearing (25-dB HL or better, 0.25–8 kHz) were asked to participate in 3 pre- and post-exposure sessions including: otoscopy, tympanometry, distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) (f2 frequencies 1–8 kHz), pure-tone audiometry (0.25–8 kHz), Words-in-Noise (WIN) test, and electrocochleography (eCochG) measurements at 70, 80, and 90-dB nHL (click and 2–4 kHz tone-bursts). The first session was used to collect baseline data, the second session was collected the day after a loud recreational event, and the third session was collected 1-week later. Of the 32 participants, 26 completed all 3 sessions.Results: The retrospective analysis did not reveal statistically significant relationships between noise exposure history and any auditory deficits. The day after new exposure, there was a statistically significant correlation between noise “dose” and WIN performance overall, and within the 4-dB signal-to-babble ratio. In contrast, there were no statistically significant correlations between noise dose and changes in threshold, DPOAE amplitude, or AP amplitude the day after new noise exposure. Additional analyses revealed a statistically significant relationship between TTS and DPOAE amplitude at 6 kHz, with temporarily decreased DPOAE amplitude observed with increasing TTS.Conclusions: There was no evidence of auditory deficits as a function of previous noise exposure history, and no permanent changes in audiometric, electrophysiologic, or functional measures after new recreational noise exposure. There were very few participants with TTS the day after exposure - a test time selected to be consistent with previous animal studies. The largest observed TTS was approximately 20-dB. The observed pattern of small TTS suggests little risk of synaptopathy from common recreational noise exposure, and that we should not expect to observe changes in evoked potentials for this reason. No such changes were observed in this study. These data do not support suggestions that common, recreational noise exposure is likely to result in “hidden hearing loss”.

Highlights

  • The mammalian auditory system is susceptible to noise exposure injury resulting from damage to cells in the inner ear

  • Additional analyses revealed a statistically significant relationship between temporary threshold shift (TTS) and Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emission (DPOAE) amplitude at 6 kHz, with temporarily decreased DPOAE amplitude observed with increasing TTS

  • There was no evidence of auditory deficits as a function of previous noise exposure history, and no permanent changes in audiometric, electrophysiologic, or functional measures after new recreational noise exposure

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Summary

Introduction

The mammalian auditory system is susceptible to noise exposure injury resulting from damage to cells in the inner ear. Changes in function can be temporary or permanent (for review, see Ryan et al, 2016). The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) federal noise regulations define an auditory “standard threshold shift” as a permanent change in hearing threshold, relative to one’s baseline audiogram, of an average of 10-dB or more at 2, 3, and 4 kHz in either ear (OSHA, 1983). A temporary threshold shift (TTS), by definition, does not meet this regulatory standard for a workplace-induced noise injury. Exposures that result in TTS may be more harmful than previously believed (Kujawa and Liberman, 2015)

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