The aim of this study is to determine the actual efficiency of the present medical treatments of acoustic trauma. Untreated and treated groups of guinea pigs are exposed to a traumatic noise exposure, inducing up to 60-dB threshold shift. The recovery is followed for up to 14 days. The first results indicate that in some animals the recovery of the threshold shifts are complete despite the fact that significant areas of hair cells are damaged. The most widely used medical treatments of acoustic trauma (oxygenotherapy, carbogen, hyperbaric oxygen, vasoactive agents, and corticotherapy) have been tested. Preliminary results indicate that pure oxygen and carbogen seem ineffective, hyperbaric oxygen used alone is dangerous, and corticoids and combined corticoid/hyperbaric oxygen seem to improve functional and morphological recovery. This study will be taken as a reference to look for new treatments that will be applied directly to the cochlea by means of an implanted osmotic micropump.
The fine tuning mechanisms involved in the normal processing of sound in the cochlea are non-linear, hence combination tones are generated inside the cochlea when a pair of low-level pure tones with neighbouring frequencies f1 and f2 is used as a stimulus. Their detection as sounds in the ear canal proves that they undergo backward propagation in the cochlea and through the middle ear, and the non-invasive measurement of the combination tone at 2f1-f2, called the cubic difference tone (CDT), has become a routine method of monitoring cochlear function. In order to gain information on the hypothetical places where CDTs are generated, on their intracochlear levels and propagation velocities, direct measurements of CDT pressure waves were carried out in scala vestibuli and tympani of the first and second turn of the guinea-pig cochlea. Cubic difference tones at 2f1-f2 varied from 0.75 to 9 kHz and were measured with a miniature piezoresistive transducer. Its high sensitivity allowed the detection of CDTs whenever their levels exceeded 5 dB SPL in the ear canal, i.e. 40 dB SPL (re: 20 microPa) inside the cochlea. The levels of CDTs were similar in scala vestibuli of the first and second turn. Phase comparisons between measurements at 2f1-f2 in the first and second turn allowed determination of the place where the CDT phase was minimum. It provided an estimation of the generation site of the CDT, which appeared to be close to the place tuned to f2 for stimulus levels lower than 70 dB SPL. Forward and backward travel times from one turn to the other were assessed at several frequencies, and both values were shorter than 0.2 ms. In contrast, the overall 'round-trip' delay of CDTs, measured in the ear canal, was about five times larger, suggesting that local filtering processes rather than propagation delays account for the overall CDT delay.
Direct intracochlear acoustic pressure recordings (from 20 to 20,000 Hz) are used to measure the middle-ear transfer functions (forward and reverse) and to better understand the cochlear mechanics in the guinea pig. In the forward direction, the middle-ear transfer function is strongly dependent on the frequency and presents a maximum of +30 dB at 1,000 Hz (bulla open). In the reverse direction, the middle-ear transfer function looks like an ideal reverse middle-ear pressure transformer with –35 dB gain and 0° phase lag from 20 to 8,000 Hz (bulla open, closed ear canal). Passive cochlear mechanics is studied with the help of intracochlear pressure measurements and differential cochlear microphonic potential recordings in the different turns.
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