Abstract
Laser Doppler flowmetry was used to assess cochlear blood flow (CoBF) in guinea pigs with experimental endolymphatic hydrops following intravenous infusion of 5 types of drugs: 50% glycerol, 70% isosorbide, 20% mannitol, 7% sodium bicarbonate, and 1% diphenidol. The magnitude of the CoBF changes following infusion tended to be smaller in the hydropic ears than in the normal control ears. A significant reduction in CoBF changes was observed in hydropic ears infused with isosorbide and sodium bicarbonate. These results suggest that the cochlear microvascular sensitivity to various stimuli such as drug infusion is reduced in hydropic ears. This may result from atrophy of the stria vascularis which is often observed in the hydropic ears of guinea pigs. Thus it seems likely that the same reaction occurs in the inner ear of patients with Ménière’s disease in whom atrophy of the stria vascularis is also presumed to exist in conjunction with extensive endolymphatic hydrops. Therefore, it seems probable that the function of the microvasculature of the stria vascularis is impaired in the inner ear of patients with Ménière’s disease, resulting in the slow progressive deterioration of the inner ear with time.
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