4.8 Article

Osmotic stabilization prevents cochlear synaptopathy after blast trauma

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1720121115

关键词

endolymphatic hydrops; in vivo imaging; cochlea; optical coherence tomography; hearing loss

资金

  1. NIH-National Institute on Deafness
  2. Other Communication Disorders [DC014450, DC013774, DC010363]
  3. Department of Defense [W81XWH-11-2-0004, DM090212]
  4. NIH [UL1 TR001085]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Traumatic noise causes hearing loss by damaging sensory hair cells and their auditory synapses. There are no treatments. Here, we investigated mice exposed to a blast wave approximating a roadside bomb. In vivo cochlear imaging revealed an increase in the volume of endolymph, the fluid within scala media, termed endolymphatic hydrops. Endolymphatic hydrops, hair cell loss, and cochlear synaptopathy were initiated by trauma to the mechano-sensitive hair cell stereocilia and were K+-dependent. Increasing the osmolality of the adjacent perilymph treated endolymphatic hydrops and prevented synaptopathy, but did not prevent hair cell loss. Conversely, inducing endolymphatic hydrops in control mice by lowering perilymph osmolality caused cochlear synaptopathy that was glutamate-dependent, but did not cause hair cell loss. Thus, endolymphatic hydrops is a surrogate marker for synaptic bouton swelling after hair cells release excitotoxic levels of glutamate. Because osmotic stabilization prevents neural damage, it is a potential treatment to reduce hearing loss after noise exposure.

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