Abstract

The classic view of sensorineural hearing loss has been that the primary damage targets are hair cells and that auditory nerve loss is typically secondary to hair cell degeneration. Recent work has challenged that view. In noise-induced hearing loss, exposures causing only reversible threshold shifts (and no hair cell loss) nevertheless cause permanent loss of >50% of the synaptic connections between hair cells and the auditory nerve. Similarly, in age-related hearing loss, degeneration of cochlear synapses precedes both hair cell loss and threshold elevation. This primary neural degeneration has remained a “hidden hearing loss” for two reasons: 1) the neuronal cell bodies survive for years despite loss of synaptic connection with hair cells, and 2) the degeneration is selective for auditory nerve fibers with high thresholds. Although not required for threshold detection when quiet, these high-threshold fibers are critical for hearing in noisy environments. Research suggests that primary neural degeneration is an important contributor to the perceptual handicap in sensorineural hearing loss, and it may be key to the generation of tinnitus and other associated perceptual anomalies. In cases where the hair cells survive, neurotrophin therapies can elicit neurite outgrowth from surviving auditory neurons and re-establishment of their peripheral synapses; thus, treatments may be on the horizon.

Highlights

  • According to the Centers for Disease Control, 25% of American adults suffer from some form of noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL)

  • Both NIHL and age-related hearing loss (AHL) are known as sensorineural hearing loss because the dysfunction arises in the inner ear, or cochlea, where sound-induced vibrations are transduced by sensory hair cells into electrical signals in cochlear neurons that relay the encoded information to the brain (Figure 1)

  • We’ve known that hair cell damage is a key contributor to the hearing loss in NIHL and AHL2–4, as defined by the audiogram, which measures the minimal sound pressure required for pure-tone detection in a quiet test booth

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Summary

Introduction

According to the Centers for Disease Control, 25% of American adults suffer from some form of noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). Cochlear synaptopathy in NIHL and AHL hair cell damage and death can be seen in minutes to hours after acoustic overexposure, death of spiral ganglion cells (the cell bodies of ANFs) is delayed by months to years[27] This observation led to the dogma that hair cells are the primary target of noise damage and that neurons die only secondarily to loss of their peripheral synapses[5]. Hidden hearing loss and problems hearing in noise Regardless of underlying mechanisms, emerging evidence suggests that surviving IHCs are partly or largely disconnected from their primary sensory fibers in many types of acquired sensorineural hearing loss This synaptopathy has been called “hidden hearing loss”[44] because the damage is not visible in routine cochlear histopathology and because primary neural degeneration does not significantly affect the threshold audiogram until it exceeds ~80%45,46. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

11. Nadol JB Jr
13. Spoendlin H
27. Johnsson LG
29. Robertson D
33. Liberman MC
37. Ruggero MA
47. Liberman MC
52. Liberman MC
PubMed Abstract
70. Groves AK
Findings
76. Liberman MC
Full Text
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