4.5 Article

Distortion product otoacoustic emissions in human hypercholesterolemia

Journal

HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 152, Issue 1-2, Pages 139-151

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-5955(00)00245-8

Keywords

distortion product otoacoustic emission; growth function of DPOAE; hearing threshold; speech audiometry; familial hypercholesterolemia

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Epidemiological and experimental studies suggest that hypercholesterolemia promotes the development of sensorineural hearing loss; however, the underlying cellular pathomechanism remains obscure. In the present study, 20 healthy subjects and 20 patients with familial hypercholesterolemia were compared with respect to their hearing function. None of the 40 persons reported any history of hearing disorder. In accordance with this subjective impression, mean hearing thresholds were within the normal, age-dependent ranges in both groups. Tn contrast, the single-generator distortion product otoacoustic emissions (sgDPOAE) were reduced at and above 4 kHz. Input-output functions of DPOAE could be subdivided into three groups: (i) normal, with unity slope at low intensities and slope less than unity (0.24 +/- 0.07 dB/dB at higher intensities; (ii) pathologic, described by a single straight line; (iii) ill-defined, with data usually indistinguishable from the background noise level. The ill-defined DPOAE behavior was only found in patients with hypercholesterolemia; namely, for 25% of patients at f(2) =1.5 kHz and for 50% at f(2) = 4 kHz. Patients belonging to the pathologic and ill-defined DPOAE groups had significantly (P < 0.05) higher total serum cholesterol and LDL;cholesterol levels compared with subjects from the normal DPOAE group. While hearing thresholds of patients with ill-defined growth functions were not statistically different from those of normal subjects, speech scores were significantly reduced in these cases. The data imply that nonlinear mechanical processes in the cochlea are compromised in hypercholesterolemic patients. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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