4.5 Article

Moderate noise trauma in juvenile cats results in profound cortical topographic map changes in adulthood

Journal

HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 142, Issue 1-2, Pages 89-101

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0378-5955(00)00024-1

Keywords

single unit; cat; primary auditory cortex; pure tone trauma; topographic map; reorganization

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Cortical topographic map changes have been reported after profound drug-induced hearing loss in neonates, after progressive high-frequency hearing loss, and after mechanically induced lesions in the cochlea of adult animals. The present study demonstrates that exposure of 5-week-old kittens to a loud 6 kHz tone, producing mild to moderate high-frequency hearing loss, induces a profound reorganization of the frequency map in auditory cortex. In the reorganized cortical region, the frequency-tuning curves were of normal sharpness with near normal thresholds. Inhibitory tuning curve bandwidths were similar to those in control animals. Spontaneous activity in the reorganized part of the cortex was significantly increased. In contrast, the strength of the crosscorrelation of the spontaneous activity of units recorded on different electrodes was the same in the normal and reorganized part. Minimum first-spike latency was significantly increased in trauma cats, largely for units at the dorsal side of the sampled region. Because most other neural response properties are normal in the reorganized part of cortex, sub-cortical topographic mag changes are likely involved in producing the altered cortical topographic maps. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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