Abstract

Tinnitus chronically affects between 10–15% of the population but, despite its prevalence, the underlying mechanisms are still not properly understood. One experimental model involves administration of high doses of sodium salicylate, as this is known to reliably induce tinnitus in both humans and animals. Guinea pigs were implanted with chronic electrocorticography (ECoG) electrode arrays, with silver‐ball electrodes placed on the dura over left and right auditory cortex. Two more electrodes were positioned over the cerebellum to monitor auditory brainstem responses (ABRs). We recorded resting‐state and auditory evoked neural activity from awake animals before and 2 h following salicylate administration (350 mg/kg; i.p.). Large increases in click‐evoked responses (> 100%) were evident across the whole auditory cortex, despite significant reductions in wave I ABR amplitudes (in response to 20 kHz tones), which are indicative of auditory nerve activity. In the same animals, significant decreases in 6–10 Hz spontaneous oscillations (alpha waves) were evident over dorsocaudal auditory cortex. We were also able to demonstrate for the first time that cortical evoked potentials can be inhibited by a preceding gap in background noise [gap‐induced pre‐pulse inhibition (PPI)], in a similar fashion to the gap‐induced inhibition of the acoustic startle reflex that is used as a behavioural test for tinnitus. Furthermore, 2 h following salicylate administration, we observed significant deficits in PPI of cortical responses that were closely aligned with significant deficits in behavioural responses to the same stimuli. Together, these data are suggestive of neural correlates of tinnitus and oversensitivity to sound (hyperacusis).

Highlights

  • Sodium salicylate, an analogue of salicylic acid, reliably induces a tinnitus in both humans and animals

  • We examined resting-state oscillatory activity, wave I auditory brainstem responses (ABRs), gap detection thresholds, which provided a measure of temporal acuity, and click-evoked potentials

  • The behavioural method used to identify animals experiencing tinnitus in this study is based on a gap detection paradigm devised by Turner et al (2006) in which we measured flexion of the pinna, or the Preyer reflex (Berger et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

An analogue of salicylic acid (the active ingredient of aspirin), reliably induces a tinnitus in both humans and animals (for a review, see Stolzberg et al, 2012). Given the reliability of salicylate in inducing tinnitus compared with the uncertain outcome of noise exposure, it is a useful research tool for understanding neural changes associated with the presence of tinnitus. Salicylate administration at moderate-to-high doses is well known to have reversible ototoxic effects (Stypulkowski, 1990). This is suggested to occur through a reduction of outer hair cell electromotility Central changes have been demonstrated in anaesthetized animals, whereby auditory

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