Abstract

Multiple epidemiological studies have revealed an association between presbycusis and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). Unfortunately, the neurobiological underpinnings of this relationship are not clear. It is possible that the two disorders share a common, as yet unidentified, risk factor, or that hearing loss may independently accelerate AD pathology. Here, we examined the relationship between reported hearing loss and brain volumes in normal, mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD subjects using a publicly available database. We found that among subjects with AD, individuals that reported hearing loss had smaller brainstem and cerebellar volumes in both hemispheres than individuals without hearing loss. In addition, we found that these brain volumes diminish in size more rapidly among normal subjects with reported hearing loss and that there was a significant interaction between cognitive diagnosis and the relationship between reported hearing loss and these brain volumes. These data suggest that hearing loss is linked to brainstem and cerebellar pathology, but only in the context of the pathological state of AD. We hypothesize that the presence of AD-related pathology in both the brainstem and cerebellum creates vulnerabilities in these brain regions to auditory deafferentation-related atrophy. These data have implications for our understanding of the potential neural substrates for interactions between hearing loss and AD.

Highlights

  • The increase in human lifespan afforded by modern medicine has revealed an emerging health crisis: the growing numbers of individuals with aging-related hearing loss (ARHL) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)

  • In the current study, we observed that in the context of AD, report of hearing loss (RHL) was associated with lowered volumes of the brainstem and cerebellum, as well as faster rates of declines in these regions

  • These data suggest that pathological changes that occur in the brainstem and cerebellum in AD increase the vulnerability of these regions to auditory deafferentationrelated pathology

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Summary

Introduction

The increase in human lifespan afforded by modern medicine has revealed an emerging health crisis: the growing numbers of individuals with aging-related hearing loss (ARHL) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). These disorders strip away patients’ abilities to connect with their loved ones, either via verbal communication or by relating shared experiences. A series of recent epidemiological studies has shown that elderly individuals with ARHL have a higher risk of developing aging-related cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or AD (Lin et al, 2011a,b,c, 2013; Panza et al, 2015; Golub et al, 2017; Thomson et al, 2017; Ford et al, 2018). Patients with AD show evidence of more central, rather than peripheral, auditory dysfunction, though both are affected in this disorder (reviewed in Swords et al, 2018)

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