The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 2002, 22(6):2383-2390
Elevated Fusiform Cell Activity in the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus of
Chinchillas with Psychophysical Evidence of Tinnitus
T. J.
Brozoski1,
C. A.
Bauer1, and
D. M.
Caspary2
1 Division of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery and
2 Department of Pharmacology, Southern Illinois University
School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois 62702
Chinchillas with psychophysical evidence of chronic tinnitus were
shown to have significantly elevated spontaneous activity and
stimulus-evoked responses in putative fusiform cells of the dorsal
cochlear nuclei (DCN). Chinchillas were psychophysically trained and
tested before and after exposure to a traumatic unilateral 80 dB (sound
pressure level) 4 kHz tone. Before exposure, two groups were
matched in terms of auditory discrimination performance (noise, and 1, 4, 6, and 10 kHz tones). After exposure, a single psychophysical
difference emerged between groups. The exposed group displayed enhanced
discrimination of 1 kHz tones (p = 0.00027). Postexposure discrimination of other stimuli was unaffected. It was
hypothesized that exposed animals experienced a chronic subjective tone
(i.e., tinnitus), resulting from their trauma, and that features of
this subjective tone were similar enough to 1 kHz to affect discrimination of 1 kHz objective signals. After psychophysical testing, single-unit recordings were obtained from each animal's DCN
fusiform cell layer. Putative fusiform cells of exposed animals showed
significantly (p = 0.0136) elevated
spontaneous activity, compared with cells of unexposed animals.
Putative fusiform cells of exposed animals showed a greater
stimulus-evoked response to tones at 1 kHz
(p = 0.0000006) and at
characteristic-frequency (p = 0.0000009).
This increased activity was more pronounced on the exposed side. No
increase in stimulus-evoked responses was observed to other frequencies
or noise. These parallel psychophysical and electrophysiological
results are consistent with the hypothesis that chronic tonal tinnitus
is associated with, and may result from, trauma-induced elevation of
activity of DCN fusiform cells.
Key words:
tinnitus; acoustic trauma; psychophysical animal model; dorsal cochlear nucleus; fusiform cells; neural plasticity
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