2011
DOI: 10.1007/s10162-011-0290-3
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Bilateral Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus Lesions Prevent Acoustic-Trauma Induced Tinnitus in an Animal Model

Abstract: Animal experiments suggest that chronic tinnitus (“ringing in the ears”) may result from processes that overcompensate for lost afferent input. Abnormally elevated spontaneous neural activity has been found in the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) of animals with psychophysical evidence of tinnitus. However, it has also been reported that DCN ablation fails to reduce established tinnitus. Since other auditory areas have been implicated in tinnitus, the role of the DCN is unresolved. The apparently conflicting elec… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…injection of retigabine affects KCNQ channels throughout the brain, these results, in combination with our physiological studies (Figs. 1-3) and the key role of DCN in tinnitus induction (14), support the notion that the pathogenic plasticity of subcortical KCNQ channel activity is crucial for the induction of tinnitus. Importantly, these results link the voltage dependence of KCNQ channel opening with the development of the perception of phantom sound.…”
Section: Plasticity Of Kcnq2/3 Channels Is Crucial For the Induction supporting
confidence: 53%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…injection of retigabine affects KCNQ channels throughout the brain, these results, in combination with our physiological studies (Figs. 1-3) and the key role of DCN in tinnitus induction (14), support the notion that the pathogenic plasticity of subcortical KCNQ channel activity is crucial for the induction of tinnitus. Importantly, these results link the voltage dependence of KCNQ channel opening with the development of the perception of phantom sound.…”
Section: Plasticity Of Kcnq2/3 Channels Is Crucial For the Induction supporting
confidence: 53%
“…The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is an auditory brainstem nucleus that is indispensable to the induction of tinnitus: ablation of the DCN before noise exposure prevents the induction of tinnitus (14). Consistent with its key role in tinnitus generation, the DCN is a site where robust tinnitus-related neuronal plasticity has been identified (15).…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The potentially reduced role of the DCN as a primary tinnitus generator site contradicts independent observations that surgical ablations of the dorsal acoustic stria (DAS) eliminate sound-induced ICC hyperactivity (Manzoor et al 2012) and prevent tinnitus behavior in sound-exposed animals (Brozoski et al 2012). In both of those studies, the DAS was lesioned soon after acoustic trauma.…”
Section: Role Of the Vcnmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…It is intriguing that ablation of the dorsal acoustic stria reduces spontaneous activity in the ICC (Manzoor et al 2012) and prevents the development of tinnitus behavior (Brozoski et al 2012). To be effective, the procedure must be performed soon after a damaging sound exposure.…”
Section: Type X and Tail Unitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bimodal plasticity that is stimulus timing-dependent has been demonstrated in auditory cortex (Basura et al, 2012) where STDP has also been implicated as a mechanism underlying stimulus timing-dependent shifts in frequency tuning (Dahmen et al, 2008). Stimulus timing-dependent frequency tuning suggests that STDP may be important for tonotopic remapping, which has been suggested as a correlate for tinnitus (Mühlnickel et al, 1998;Komiya and Eggermont, 2000).…”
Section: Stdp Alterations As a Neural Correlate For Tinnitusmentioning
confidence: 99%