2014
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00576.2014
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Increased contralateral suppression of otoacoustic emissions indicates a hyperresponsive medial olivocochlear system in humans with tinnitus and hyperacusis

Abstract: Knudson IM, Shera CA, Melcher JR. Increased contralateral suppression of otoacoustic emissions indicates a hyperresponsive medial olivocochlear system in humans with tinnitus and hyperacusis. J Neurophysiol 112: 3197-3208, 2014. First published September 17, 2014 doi:10.1152/jn.00576.2014.-Atypical medial olivocochlear (MOC) feedback from brain stem to cochlea has been proposed to play a role in tinnitus, but even well-constructed tests of this idea have yielded inconsistent results. In the present study, it … Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, the medial olivary cochlear system has anti-masking functions to adjust cochlear amplification in situations of listening to speech-in-noise (Bidelman and Bhagat, 2015). This might be involved in hyperacusis as shown by decreased distortion-product otoacoustic emissions, as elicited by noise presented to the contralateral ear in patients with tinnitus and low sound level tolerance (Knudson et al, 2014). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the medial olivary cochlear system has anti-masking functions to adjust cochlear amplification in situations of listening to speech-in-noise (Bidelman and Bhagat, 2015). This might be involved in hyperacusis as shown by decreased distortion-product otoacoustic emissions, as elicited by noise presented to the contralateral ear in patients with tinnitus and low sound level tolerance (Knudson et al, 2014). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The CAS was the same broadband noise as that used for measurements of MOC inhibition on CAPs and DPOAEs. A “suppressor” tone was used to suppress the stimulus frequency OAE (SFOAE) produced by the probe tone (Lilaonitkul & Guinan 2009a; Francis & Guinan 2010; Knudson et al 2014). Suppressing the SFOAE insures that any CAS-induced change in the ear-canal sound pressure level of the probe is due only to the MEMR and not to a MOC effect on the SFOAE.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is possible experimentally by decoupling the input to the two ears: When playing broadband noise to one ear, the sensitivity of the other ear is reduced. This is called contralateral suppression and presumably mediated by the olivo-cochlear system (Knudson et al, 2014). The exact proportion of ipsi-vs. contralateral olivo-cochlear innervation is variable and depends on the species and tonotopic position on the cochlea.…”
Section: Anatomy and Physiology Of The Olivo-cochlear Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%