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Previous Article
The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2002, 22(21):9643-9650
Effects of Furosemide Applied Chronically to the Round Window:
A Model of Metabolic Presbyacusis
Richard A.
Schmiedt1,
Hainan
Lang1,
Hiro-oki
Okamura2, and
Bradley A.
Schulte1, 2
Departments of 1 Otolaryngology and Head-Neck Surgery
and 2 Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Medical University
of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina 29425
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ABSTRACT |
Hearing thresholds in elderly humans without a history of noise
exposure commonly show a profile of a flat loss at low frequencies coupled with a loss that increases with frequency above ~2 kHz. This
profile and the relatively robust distortion product otoacoustic emissions that are found in elderly subjects challenge the
common belief that age-related hearing loss (presbyacusis) is based
primarily on sensory-cell disorders. Here, we examine a model of
presbyacusis wherein the endocochlear potential (EP) is reduced by
means of furosemide applied chronically to one cochlea of a young
gerbil. The model results in an EP that is reduced from 90 to ~60 mV, a value often seen in quiet-aged gerbils, with no concomitant loss of
hair cells. Resulting measures of cochlear and neural function are
quantitatively similar to those seen in aging gerbils and humans, e.g.,
a flat threshold loss at low frequencies with a high-frequency roll-off
of approximately 8.4 dB/octave. The effect of the EP on neural
thresholds can be parsimoniously explained by the known gain
characteristics of the cochlear amplifier as a function of cochlear
location: in the apex, amplification is limited to ~20 dB, whereas in
the base, the gain can be as high as 60 dB. At high frequencies,
amplification is directly proportional to the EP on an ~1 dB/mV
basis. This model suggests that the primary factor in true age-related
hearing loss is an energy-starved cochlear amplifier that results in a
specific audiogram profile.
Key words:
hearing; aging; gerbil; endocochlear
potential; otoacoustic emissions; compound action potentials; presbyacusis
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INTRODUCTION |
Schuknecht (1974) has described four
types of human presbyacusis: (1) sensory, mainly affecting cochlear
hair cells and supporting cells; (2) neural, typified by the loss of
afferent neurons in the cochlea; (3) metabolic, in which the stria
vascularis and lateral wall of the cochlea atrophy; and (4) mechanical,
in which there is a stiffening of the basilar membrane and organ of
Corti. In a later report, Schuknecht and Gacek (1993) described atrophy of the stria as the predominant lesion in temporal bones of elderly humans and sensory cell loss as being the least important cause of
hearing loss in the elderly, especially if confounding factors, such as
noise and drug exposures and genetic defects, are eliminated.
The recent findings of Gates et al. (2001) using distortion product
otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) and audiogram data support the conclusion
that sensory loss is not as prevalent in the aging population as once
thought. Indeed, Gates et al. conclude that metabolic presbyacusis is
the predominant cause of hearing loss with age. Other animal models
that exclude noise history or genetic problems lend support to that
conclusion. These models include rabbit (Bhattacharyya and Dayal,
1985 ), and CBA mice (Spongr et al., 1997 ). Even old C57BL/6 mice
develop strial pathologies (Ichimiya et al., 2000 ).
Three of the four types of presbyacusis are known to occur in the
gerbil model, the one type not yet demonstrated being mechanical. Scattered outer hair cell (OHC) losses are seen in the base and apex of
the cochlea in the quiet-aged gerbil (Tarnowski et al., 1991 ; Schmiedt
and Schulte, 1992 ). Neuronal loss is evident in spiral ganglion
cell counts in Rosenthal's canal (Keithley et al., 1989 ; Slepecky et
al., 2000 ; Suryadevara et al., 2001 ). Finally, lateral-wall
degeneration, most specifically that of the stria vascularis, is almost
always seen in quiet-aged gerbils (Gratton and Schulte, 1995 ; Gratton
et al., 1996 , 1997 ). A functional consequence of metabolic presbyacusis
is to decrease the quiescent value of the endocochlear potential (EP)
in scala media, even while leaving the potassium concentration in
endolymph relatively normal (Rybak and Morizono, 1982 ; Schulte and
Schmiedt, 1992 ; Schmiedt, 1996 ).
Furosemide is a selective and reversible inhibitor of the EP generator
and has often been used to examine the effects of reduced EP on
cochlear function (Evans and Klinke, 1982 ; Sewell, 1984a ,b ,c ; Ruggero
and Rich, 1991 ; Rybak et al., 1992 ; Mills et al., 1993 ; Rybak, 1993 ;
Mills and Rubel, 1994 ; Rubsamen et al., 1995 ; Mills, 1997a ,b ). Here we
describe the effects of chronic infusion of low levels of furosemide
into the cochlea with regard to changes in the EP, DPOAEs, and the
population response of auditory-nerve fibers. The population response
measure used is the compound action potential (CAP). The furosemide
model of metabolic presbyacusis yields results quantitatively similar
to those obtained from aged gerbils. Moreover, the model supports the
hypothesis that age-related hearing loss in the absence of external
insults, such as noise or drug exposure, is primarily the result
of a reduced EP rather than loss of sensory cells.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. This study represents data from 145 Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) collected over a
period of 7 years. Sixty young animals of between 4 and 8 months
of age were implanted with pumps. Data from the young
furosemide-treated gerbils were compared with two groups of quiet-aged
gerbils: the first cohort of gerbils aged 36 months comprised 26 animals, and a second group of 38 gerbils were aged 36 months
(n = 27) and between 38 and 45 months
(n = 11). The two groups of aged animals were tested ~3 years apart. Control groups were run in parallel with the aged animals and comprised a total of 21 animals aged between 4 and 8 months. Control data for the young gerbils implanted with pumps were
obtained from the untreated left ears. Both sexes with healthy external
ears were used in these experiments. Animals were born and reared in an
acoustically controlled colony in which median sound pressure levels
(SPL) were typically <40 dBA. The animal facilities have full
accreditation from Association for Assessment and Accreditation of
Laboratory Animal Care, and all experimental procedures were approved
by the local Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and met
National Institutes of Health guidelines for animal care.
Surgical procedures. The survival surgery for pump
implantation was done under sterile conditions. Antibiotics were not
used, and none of the animals showed signs of any past or ongoing
infections. Animals were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg) and were given atropine to reduce secretions. Alzet (Durect,
Cupertino, CA) mini-osmotic pumps (model 2004) were used in all
of the experiments. These pumps have a fill volume of ~200 µl and a
mean pumping rate of 0.25 µl/hr. Under these conditions, they will
last ~28 d. Cannulas were surgical-grade silicon tubing. Pumps
and cannulas were sterilized, filled, and allowed to equilibrate at
37°C for 2 d before implantation. Pumps were filled with 1, 2, 3, 5, and 10 mg/ml (corresponding to a range of ~3-30
mM) furosemide. The main focus in this report is
on animals treated with 5 mg/ml for 7 d, a dosage schedule that
yielded physiological data closest to the mean data obtained from our
aged gerbils. The pump was placed subdermally behind the scapulae, and
the cannula was threaded through holes in the bulla to the round window
(RW) niche (Chamberlain, 1977 ) and fixed in place at the surface
of the bulla with dental cement. The bulla was then fully closed with
the cement. Incisions were closed with suture, and the animal was
allowed to recover in its cage on a heating pad. Any postsurgical
discomfort was treated with buprenorphine, but most animals showed no
signs of discomfort.
Pumps were allowed to remain in the animal for between 2 and 28 d.
The bioactivity of furosemide kept in pumps at 37°C for 28 d was
checked with HPLC and found to be stable. Moreover, in a few animals,
the cannulas became disconnected from the pumps, allowing controls for
cannula placement on hearing thresholds and otoacoustic emissions. In
all cases, with chronic implantation of just the cannula, hearing
thresholds, EP values, and DPOAE levels were similar to the control
ear. During the terminal experiment, placement of the cannula within
the RW niche was checked. Data from those few animals wherein the
cannula was displaced from the niche were discarded. Finally, the pump
delivery of 0.25 µl/hr was easily absorbed through the RW and into
the surrounding bone, resulting in a dry middle-ear cavity with no
adverse effects on middle-ear acoustics or on the recording of the CAP response.
Surgical procedures for the recording of the CAP response and the EP
have been described in detail in previous articles (Schmiedt and
Zwislocki, 1977 ; Schmiedt, 1993 , 1996 ; Hellstrom and Schmiedt, 1996 ;
Schmiedt et al., 1996 ). Briefly, the animal was anesthetized with
sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg) and placed in a sound- and vibration-isolated booth that was heated to maintain the cochlea at or
near body temperature. Supplemental doses of anesthesia were given as
needed. The core temperature of the animal was controlled by a
closed-loop DC heating pad. The pinna and surrounding glands were
removed, and the bulla was opened widely. The CAP electrode, an
Ag-AgCl wire, was placed on the bony rim of the RW niche. CAP potentials were voltage amplified by 10,000 and then lead to an oscilloscope and computer. The acoustic assembly consisting of a probe
tube microphone (B&K 4134; Brüel & Kjær, Norcross, GA) and
driver (model DT-48; Beyer Dynamic, Farmingdale, NY) was sealed to the bony ear canal with closed-cell foam. In implanted ears, the
cannula was left in place during the CAP and EP recordings.
Physiological procedures. CAP thresholds were obtained
audiovisually at half octave frequencies from 0.5 to 16 kHz and at 20 kHz. The tone pips were generated in the frequency domain by Tucker-Davis Technologies (Gainesville, FL) equipment and software, and
the spectrum was normalized to the average ear canal SPL found in 30 gerbils. The pips had an overall duration of 1.8 msec with a
cos2 rise-fall time of 0.55 msec. CAP
input/output (I/O) functions were obtained by averaging 24 epochs using
the same tone pips. CAP tuning and suppression boundaries were obtained
using the forward masking and unmasking methods described by Dallos and Cheatham (1976 , 1977 ) and Hellstrom and Schmiedt (1996) in the gerbil.
The forward masker (and unmasker) were 60 msec tones with 5 msec
rise-fall times terminating 10 msec before the standard 1.8 msec
exciter tone pip.
Endocochlear potentials were recorded at the RW and in cochlear turns
1, 2, and 3 corresponding to best frequencies of ~20, 16, 2.2, and 1 kHz according to the single-fiber map of Müller (1996) . The
electrode approach in the cochlear turns was through the bony lateral
wall of the otic capsule via a small hole made with a slowly rotating
drill bit. EP microelectrodes were filled with 0.2 M KCl
and averaged 30 M impedance. EP was always measured as the voltage
difference between scala media and a pool of isotonic saline on the
neck muscles for each turn.
DPOAEs were measured with an ARIEL (Ariel, Cranbury, NJ) board and
CUBeDISP (ETYM TIC Research, Elk Grove Village, IL)
software using the B&K 4134 microphone, probe tube, and
frequency equalizer. The intensity levels of both primaries were fixed
at 50 dB SPL. Other primary levels were used, mostly
L1 = 50, L2 = 40 dB SPL, but the results did
not differ substantially from those obtained with
L1 = L2 = 50 dB SPL and are not shown in
this report. Primary levels below ~65 dB SPL are known to be quite
vulnerable in the gerbil, whereas those above 70 dB are not (Mills et
al., 1993 ). Primary tones were swept from
f2=20.0 to 0.5 kHz with an
f2/f1 ratio of 1.2 and a resolution of 10 points per octave. For clarity in
the figures presented here, every other point was dropped for a
resolution of 5 points per octave. Additional methodology for obtaining
the DPOAEs can be found by Boettcher and Schmiedt (1995) . Complete
physiological evaluations, including CAP thresholds and I/O functions,
DPOAEs, and EPs were obtained in all of the ears examined in this
study, and identical procedures were done in both the left (control)
and right ears of each animal.
Morphological procedures. Surface preparations followed the
procedures described by Tarnowski et al. (1991) with minor
modifications. Briefly, anesthetized animals were exsanguinated by
transcardial perfusion with 10 ml of 0.9% saline solution containing
0.1% sodium nitrite, followed by 50 ml of a freshly prepared mixture
of 4% paraformaldehyde and 2% glutaraldehyde. The inner ears were
then immersed in fixative overnight at 4°C, decalcified with EDTA, and postfixed with a 1% OsO4-1.5%
K4 Fe(CN)6 solution for 2 hr in darkness. Specimens were dehydrated and embedded in Epon LX112 resin. After partial polymerization, the cochleas were bisected and
dissected into half turns, which were reembedded in Epon as a flat
surface preparation.
Hair cells were evaluated with a long working distance 40× oil
immersion objective (numerical aperture 0.85; Epiplan; Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). A calibrated ocular reticule was used to measure
cochlear distance. Distances along the cochlear duct were converted to
frequencies using the single fiber map of Müller (1996) , which is
similar to our previous map (Tarnowski et al., 1991 ). Hair cells were
recorded as absent based on spaces created by missing cells. A computer
program divided the cochlea into 50 bins of equal length, and an
averaging algorithm was applied to calculate hair cell densities.
Percentage of loss was calculated from mean data of known hair cell
densities obtained from young control cochleas (Tarnowski et al.,
1991 ).
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RESULTS |
A complete data set obtained from one furosemide-treated cochlea
and its contralateral control ear are illustrated in Figures 1-3.
In this animal, the furosemide treatment consisted of 1 mg/ml for
28 d. The results from this animal typify data obtained from all
of the furosemide-treated gerbils. CAP thresholds and EP values recorded in all three turns of both the treated and control ears are
shown in the top panel of Figure 1. The control ear showed a
normal range of EP values and neural thresholds. In contrast, the EP
measured in the treated ear was reduced between 40 and 70 mV from
normal, with CAP thresholds greatly elevated at high frequencies but
only ~15 dB at low frequencies.

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Figure 1.
Neural (CAP) responses and DPOAEs in a gerbil
infused with furosemide for 28 d. Top, CAP
thresholds to tone pips as a function of frequency for the right ear
(RE) treated with furosemide and left, untreated ear
(LE). The curves plot the audibility
curves of each ear. Control thresholds are within the normal range for
the gerbil. EP values measured in the basal (T1; 16 kHz), middle (T2; 2 kHz), and upper (T3;
1 kHz) turns are shown for each cochlea. Note that the EP was shifted
40-50 mV in the apical turns, yet the corresponding neural shifts were
only ~15 dB. In the base, the EP shift was ~70-80 mV and
corresponded to a 60 dB shift of the neural response.
Arrow marks the probe frequency used to obtain the
tuning curve data. Middle, CAP tuning (solid
line) and suppression (dashed lines) boundaries
obtained with masking procedures from the furosemide-treated ear. The
probe frequency was 8 kHz, at which neural thresholds were elevated by
~25 dB. The tuning is still sharp, and the suppression boundaries
indicate that two-tone suppression is still present, despite an EP
reduced to 30 mV. Bottom, DPOAE amplitudes obtained in
the same ears with low-level primaries fixed at 50 dB SPL
(L1 = L2) and swept across frequency with a
ratio of
f1/f2 = 1.2. The resulting DPOAE amplitudes from the treated ear show only
minor changes from control values, except at the highest frequencies.
Dotted curve is acoustic noise floor.
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Figure 2.
Neural I/O functions plotting the
CAP peak amplitude as a function of the intensity of acoustic probe
tones at 2, 4, 8, and 16 kHz. Data are from the animal of Figure 1 and
represent an average of 24 epochs at each intensity level. All
furosemide-treated ears showed similar trends compared with control
ears, i.e., reduced slopes with much-reduced maximum amplitudes.
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Figure 3.
Hair cell counts along the cochlear spiral.
Frequency-distance map of the cochlear length is taken from
Müller (1996) . Top, Counts obtained from the
control cochlea show almost no loss. Blank region was caused by missed
section during processing. Bottom, Hair cell loss in the
treated ear was very minor and was within normal control bounds. These
profiles are similar to the three other furosemide-treated
cochleas processed for hair cell counts. There was no evidence that the
furosemide at pump concentrations of between 1 and 10 mg/ml affected
hair cell survival.
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Masked and unmasked CAP tuning and suppression boundaries obtained with
an 8 kHz exciter tone are plotted in the middle panel of
Figure 1. These curves have been shown to be analogs of single-fiber tuning and suppression boundaries (Dallos and Cheatham, 1976 , 1977 ;
Harris and Dallos, 1979 ). Tuning from the furosemide-treated cochleas
was sharply defined despite significant threshold shifts at the probe
frequency arising from the EP loss. In the example shown here, the
threshold shift at 8 kHz is 25 dB compared with the control ear.
Coupled with the sharp tuning, two-tone rate suppression was present in
the furosemide-treated cochleas until threshold shifts exceeded 40-50
dB. Similar results from single-fiber and CAP responses have been found
in quiet-aged gerbils (Schmiedt et al., 1990 ; Hellstrom and Schmiedt,
1996 ). Thus, chronic EP-deprived cochleas usually maintain
nonlinearities that are derived from OHC function. In contrast,
threshold shifts caused by OHC loss are commonly associated with
decreased sharp tuning and an absence of suppression (Schmiedt
et al., 1980 ; Dallos, 1992 ; Robles and Ruggero, 2001 ).
The bottom panel of Figure 1 plots DPOAE amplitudes from the
control and treated ears in this animal as a function of
f2 in the standard "DPgram" format
(Schmiedt and Addy, 1982 ; Schmiedt, 1986 ; Probst, 1990 ). As judged by
the DPOAE amplitudes (Probst, 1990 ), OHC function was nearly unaffected
by the 50 mV drop in the EP, except at the very basal locations above
~16 kHz at which the DPOAE amplitudes fall near the noise floor of
the measuring system. Relatively robust DPOAEs (relative to the
threshold shifts) were recorded in all animals of the furosemide group,
except in a few cases in which thresholds were raised over 40 dB.
The CAP I/O functions plotted in Figure 2 were obtained from the same
animal as shown in Figure 1. CAP I/O functions from treated ears with a
lowered EP were always significantly shallower in slope than those from
untreated ears, with markedly reduced maximum amplitudes. Like the CAP
and DPOAE data shown in Figure 1, these I/O results are very similar to
those found in quiet-aged gerbils, in which the EP is reduced to an
average of ~60 mV in 36-month-old gerbils (Hellstrom and Schmiedt,
1990 ; Schmiedt, 1996 ).
Hair cell counts in the form of cochleograms were obtained in four
animals treated with doses of furosemide ranging between 1 and 10 mg/ml
for 10-28 d. In all cases, hair cell loss was not significantly
different from the control ear, i.e., the hair cell counts were normal
in the furosemide-treated ears. Cochleograms from the treated and
untreated ears of the animal associated with Figures 1 and 2 are shown
in Figure 3. The blank region in the control ear was caused by an
unusable plastic-embedded section.
Similarities among profiles of CAP thresholds obtained from five
furosemide-treated and five aged ears are shown in Figure 4. Control data for both
panels are from seven untreated ears from the furosemide set
of animals. The top panel illustrates the range of
thresholds found with 5 mg/ml furosemide applied for 7 d.
Individual variability ranged from almost-normal thresholds with a 78 mV EP measured at the RW, to a cochlea with an EP of 10 mV that had
only responses to low-frequency tone pips. The overall pattern of the
CAP threshold shifts was a constant shift at low frequencies coupled
with an increasing shift above ~4 kHz. Data from aged animals plotted
in the bottom panel of Figure 4 showed similar trends, both
in terms of individual variability and the overall profile of the
thresholds.

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Figure 4.
Neural threshold data from furosemide-treated and
aged gerbils compared with their respective control groups. EP measured
at the round window is shown for each curve.
Top, CAP thresholds obtained from right ears of five
gerbils after 7 d of 5 mg/ml furosemide treatment. Control means
are from seven control ears; error bars are SEM.
Bottom, Same as above but for a group of five aged ears.
Controls are the same as the top panel. Note parallel
shift of treated and aged ears at low frequencies coupled with an
increasing loss at high frequencies.
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DPOAE amplitudes in the furosemide-treated and aged ears were also
similar as shown in Figure 5. The
top and middle panels illustrate the DPOAE data
from control ears and from either furosemide-treated (5 mg/ml for
7 d) or aged ears, respectively. The controls for the furosemide
group were the untreated ears. Control data for the aged group were
obtained from a young cohort in a similar time frame as the aged data.
The noise floor of the measuring system is indicated by the
dashed lines in the top and middle panels. Note that the DPOAEs, although reduced from the control values, are still robust in both groups. The bottom panel
directly compares the data from the furosemide and aged groups. Both
groups show an approximately flat loss across frequency, despite the increasing neural threshold shifts seen at the higher frequencies in
both groups (Fig. 4). DPOAE amplitudes from elderly humans show
quantitatively similar trends (Castor et al., 1994 ).

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Figure 5.
Mean ± SEM DPOAE amplitudes from
furosemide-treated and quiet-aged gerbils obtained in a similar manner
to those in the bottom panel of Figure 1.
Top, Mean DPOAE amplitudes from six control and 11 furosemide ears from gerbils. Middle, Mean DPOAEs from
10 young control ears and 38 gerbils aged between 36 and 45 months.
Bottom, Comparison of mean DPOAE amplitudes from the
top and middle panels. Note the
quantitative similarity of the amplitudes from the two groups. The
DPOAE amplitudes are approximately flat across frequency and do not
reflect typical neural threshold shifts shown in this figure and in
Figures 1 and 7.
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CAP threshold shifts are plotted against corresponding EP shifts from
furosemide-treated gerbils (top) or 36-month-old gerbils (bottom) in Figure 6. Controls
are the untreated ear for the furosemide group and mean data from a
young parallel cohort for the aged ears. Each point
corresponds to a single measure of EP in one cochlea. Data in the
furosemide group are shown from all dosage schedules and not just 5 mg/ml. Apical threshold shifts at 1 and 2 kHz are plotted as X
symbols and are compared with EP shifts obtained in turns 3 (T3) and 2 (T2), respectively. The best
frequencies of these locations according to frequency-distance maps of
the gerbil cochlea are ~1 and 2 kHz, respectively (Tarnowski et al., 1991 ; Müller, 1996 ). Similarly, 16 kHz CAP threshold shifts are plotted against EP measures taken in the first turn (T1) or
through the RW. The dashed lines are drawn at a 20 dB shift,
which seems to be an upper bound for the low-frequency data. The
solid lines are not best fits to the basal (high-frequency)
data but signify a slope of 1 dB/mV. The basal data primarily follow
the 1 dB/mV line for both groups of animals. Interestingly, the CAP
threshold shifts at high frequencies of the aged group tend to be on
the high side of the solid line, whereas the threshold
shifts of the furosemide group tend to be on the low side. The greater
CAP threshold shifts for the aged animals at high frequencies may be
caused by the scattered OHC and ganglion cell loss often seen in the cochlear base of the aged gerbil (Tarnowski et al., 1991 ). Conversely, it is clear that large decreases in the EP were associated with an
asymptotic maximum of ~20 dB of CAP threshold shift in the apical
turns. Thus, neural thresholds were highly correlated with EP at high
frequencies but shifted only 20 dB, regardless of EP shift at low
frequencies.

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Figure 6.
Scatter plots of CAP threshold shifts and EP
shifts compared in the same cochlea at similar locations. CAP threshold
shifts at 16 kHz are thus plotted with EP measures taken at turn 1 (T1) or the RW, whereas CAP shifts at 2 and 1 kHz are
plotted with EP measures taken at turns 2 (T2) and 3 (T3), respectively. Thus, each point
represents a neural shift plotted against a corresponding EP shift in a
given cochlea. Lines are not best-fits to data but are
drawn either as an upper bound at 20 dB (dashed) or with
a slope of 1 dB/mV (solid). Top, Data
from 16 furosemide-treated animals; the contralateral, untreated
cochlea served as individual control in each animal.
Bottom, Data from 35 aged gerbils; control data were
taken from a group of 10 young cochleas. The 16 kHz data in both groups
correlate well with EP loss; however, the 1 and 2 kHz data shift
asymptotically to 20 dB for EP reductions >20 mV. The similarity
between the data strongly support the EP loss as being the defining
factor in the presbyacusis of the quiet-aged gerbil.
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An overall comparison of mean CAP threshold shifts obtained from the
furosemide model to similar mean data from three groups of aged gerbils
is shown in the top panel of Figure
7. Mean EP values taken at the RW are
also shown for each group. Error bars are ±SEM. The 36-month-old
animals are split into two groups, with 3 years separating the two
groups. The 38-month-old group was a subset of the second 36-month-old
group. The furosemide data models very well the aged data with a
constant low-frequency loss coupled with an increasing loss at high
frequencies. A line is fitted to the furosemide data above 4 kHz with a
slope of 8.4 dB/octave. The break point between the
horizontal (dashed) line and the
sloped line is 4.2 kHz in the gerbil data. The increased loss at low frequencies evident in the 38-month-old group is probably the result of scattered OHC loss in the apex of the cochlea, which is
often greater than that in the base (Bhattacharyya and Dayal, 1985 ;
Tarnowski et al., 1991 ).

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Figure 7.
Mean ± SEM CAP threshold shifts in aged and
furosemide-treated gerbils compared with human audiograms. Hearing loss
is relative to the respective control data for the gerbils.
Top, Mean data obtained from three groups of aged
gerbils are shown. An early cohort of 36-month-old gerbils (open
squares), a second cohort tested 3 years after the first
(open triangles), and a third cohort of very old gerbils
tested at between ages 38 and 45 months (gray
triangles). Mean data from 10 gerbils treated with 5 mg/ml
furosemide for 7 d are also plotted (filled
circles). Mean EP values obtained at the RW are shown for each
group. Note the relatively flat loss at low frequencies coupled with an
increasing loss at high frequencies. Dashed line is a
best fit through the furosemide data at 4 kHz and below. Solid
line is best fit through the furosemide data above 4 kHz and
has a slope of 8.4 dB/octave. Break point between the
dashed and solid lines is at 4.2 kHz. The
increased loss at low frequencies for the 38-month-old gerbils most
likely has origins in apical hair cell loss that is seen in these very
old gerbils (see Results). Bottom, Audiograms
from 123 elderly humans without a significant history of noise exposure
(from Jerger et al., 1993 ). Dashed line is a best fit
for female data at low frequencies. Solid line is drawn
through the female data at high frequencies with the same slope as
found from the furosemide model in top panel.
Arrow indicates the break point in humans at 1.3 kHz.
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Human audiograms of elderly males and females with no significant noise
history are plotted in the bottom panel of Figure 7. The
data are from Jerger et al. (1993) . The human data follow the same
trends as the gerbil models, both aged and furosemide-treated. The
low-frequency loss is flat with a break point at 1.3 kHz, at which a
steeper loss is apparent. The solid line indicates the same
slope as that shown in the top panel for the gerbils. It has
a slope of 8.4 dB/octave and is fitted to the female data at 2 kHz
and above. These results suggest that it is possible to distinguish
between metabolic and sensory presbyacusis from the shape of the
audiogram, i.e., a flat loss at low frequencies with a loss rolling off
at approximately 10 dB/octave above ~2 kHz. A steeper roll-off at
either high or low frequencies would suggest an additional
sensorineural loss.
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DISCUSSION |
The data presented strongly support the hypothesis that EP
reduction is a primary factor in true age-related hearing loss. Our
model using furosemide applied chronically to the RW to reduce the EP
in a young cochlea quantitatively replicates cochlear function in
quiet-aged gerbils, including neural (CAP) threshold shifts, I/O
functions, DPOAE amplitudes, and the values of EP measured along the
cochlear spiral. The threshold profile of a flat loss at low
frequencies coupled with an sloping loss at high frequencies is similar
to that found in elderly humans (Gates et al., 1990 ), especially women
and those screened against a previous history of noise and drug
exposures (Jerger et al., 1993 ). Thus, OHC loss, although certainly
present in all aging cochleas, is not necessarily the primary cause of
the high-frequency hearing loss prevalent in the elderly.
The model assumes that furosemide acts solely on the generator of the
EP. However, a caveat in this respect is that Santos-Sacchi et al.
(2001) have shown recently using an isolated OHC preparation that
furosemide can have direct effects on OHC function. We believe that the
in vivo perilymph concentrations of furosemide in our model
are much smaller than those used by Santos-Sacchi et al. It is
certainly true that furosemide concentrations will be highest nearest
the RW, decreasing with cochlear distance toward the apex (Salt, 2001 ;
Salt and Ma, 2001 ). Using the cochlear diffusion model of Salt (2001)
with blood and middle-ear clearance half-lives set to 30 min with
direct (as opposed to RW) perfusion into the perilymph at 0.25 µl/hr,
steady-state concentrations of furosemide reach ~1
mM on average throughout the perilymph in scala
tympani. As expected, the highest concentrations are nearest the RW and can reach ~6 mM, which is approximately where
furosemide begins to have direct effects on OHC function (Santos-Sacchi
et al., 2001 ). The cochlear frequencies associated with the highest
concentrations are between 20 and 40 kHz, the upper end of the
audibility curve for the gerbil and above the frequencies tested here.
On the other hand, arguments against furosemide acting directly on OHC
function rather than through decreasing the EP in our model are as
follows: (1) the results correspond quantitatively to those obtained
with aged cochleas in which the EP is reduced without the use of
furosemide; (2) the EP in our model is often reduced to a more or less
constant value throughout the cochlea, similar to aged ears; (3) there
is no hair cell loss found in the cochleas treated chronically with
furosemide for as long as 28 d; and (4) the neural thresholds
shifts seen at high frequencies are similar to those reported by Sewell
(1984a ,b ,c ) with intravenous injections of furosemide, which minimize
its direct effects on OHCs (Santos-Sacchi et al., 2001 ). The
high-frequency CAP-EP shifts found by Sewell essentially followed a 1 dB/mV slope, similar to the data presented here in which furosemide was
applied to the RW.
Assuming that furosemide acts mainly on the EP, how can the
threshold shift profile found in this model be explained? A
parsimonious explanation lies in how the cochlea amplifier (Davis,
1983 ; Russell, 1983 ) responds to decreases in the EP along the cochlear
spiral. These data can be found in studies of basilar-membrane
vibration patterns measured in the base and apex of the cochlea (Cooper and Rhode, 1997 ; Robles and Ruggero, 2001 ). The gain of the cochlear amplifier in the base of the cochlea is closely related with and extremely dependent on OHC function and can approach 60 dB in a healthy
cochlea. [Gain can be defined in terms of vibration response
amplitudes measured in a healthy preparation versus the those found
postmortem (for review, see Robles and Ruggero, 2001 ).] On the other
hand, the gain of the cochlear amplifier in the apex is limited to only
~20 dB.
To complete the picture, the relationship between the EP and cochlear
amplifier must be examined. This has been done in some detail by many
investigators using furosemide as the modulating agent for the EP
(Evans and Klinke, 1982 ; Sewell, 1984a ,b ,c ; Ruggero and Rich, 1991 ;
Mills et al., 1993 ; Mills and Rubel, 1994 ; Mills, 1997a ,b , 2000 ) or
extrinsic currents (Nuttall, 1985 ; Xue et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Ren and
Nuttall, 1998 ). These studies have shown a direct relationship of the
cochlear amplifier response to the value of the EP. Indeed, Sewell
(1984a) showed in cat that CAP thresholds to clicks were almost exactly
proportional to the EP in a ratio of 1 dB/mV. Low-CF fibers were least
affected by the furosemide, and high-CF fibers were most affected.
Together, these results invoke the following hypothesis: that threshold
shifts seen in aged ears are the result of the decreased EP lowering
the gain of the cochlear amplifier. In other words, threshold
elevations in metabolic presbyacusis are the result of an
energy-starved cochlear amplifier. Threshold loss at low frequencies
asymptotes at ~20 dB because that is the limit of the cochlear
amplifier gain in the apex. Similarly, basal thresholds are much more
dependent on the EP because the gain of the amplifier is so much
greater in the base, operating on a 1 dB/mV slope over a large dynamic
range (Fig. 6). If true, then thresholds may regain normal
values if the EP could be renormalized in aged cochleas with hair cell
and neural systems that are primarily intact.
Whereas high-frequency neural thresholds are tightly coupled to
cochlear amplifier gain, DPOAE levels are not. Indeed, there is a
constant shift in the DPOAE levels across frequency in chronic furosemide-treated and aged gerbils (Fig. 5) and in many aged humans
(Castor et al., 1994 ; He and Schmiedt, 1996 ). Thus, in cases in which
EP is chronically decreased, equating DPOAE level shifts to cochlear
amplifier gain changes or neural threshold shifts is problematic. On
the other hand, the constant decrease of DPOAEs across frequency does
match the constant loss of the EP along the cochlear spiral seen with
age and chronic furosemide treatment.
Obviously, the inner hair cell (IHC) system is also dependent on
the EP for depolarizing currents. With large EP decrements, it is clear
the IHC depolarization will be adversely affected, and threshold shifts
at low frequencies could become greater than the 20 dB loss associated
with the cochlear amplifier (Nuttall, 1985 ; Rubsamen et al., 1995 ).
This is born out by acute applications of furosemide in which threshold
shifts across all frequencies can be much greater than 20 dB (Rybak,
1982 , 1993 ; Sewell, 1984a ,b ). Perhaps the chronic application of low
levels of furosemide allows the hair cell system, especially the IHCs,
to adapt to the drop in the EP (Mills et al., 1993 ; Mills and
Rubel, 1994 ; Mills, 1997a ,b ), thereby yielding a threshold profile
similar to that in quiet-aged gerbils.
The gain profile of the cochlear amplifier as a function of frequency
in the gerbil is similar to that found in elderly humans, especially
females, resulting in a high-frequency neural loss with a slope of
8.4 dB/octave (Fig. 7). In gerbils, the break point is ~4.2 kHz,
whereas in humans it is ~1.3 kHz. Thus, the cochlear amplifier seems
much more active at lower frequencies in humans than in gerbil,
suggesting that the human cochlea has evolved sharper tuning at lower
frequencies than that found in rodents. It is also interesting to note
that the ratio of these break point frequencies is approximately equal
to the ratio of the cochlear lengths of the gerbil and human, ~12
versus ~33 mm, respectively (Schuknecht, 1974 ; Tarnowski et al.,
1991 ).
If the slope of the high-frequency roll-off found in gerbils and humans
is indeed similar for a given decrement in the EP, then one prediction
of our model is that metabolic presbyacusis can be differentiated from
sensory presbyacusis by the audiogram profile. Metabolic presbyacusis
should yield audiograms like those in the bottom panel of
Figure 7, in which the slope of the roll-off is approximately 8.4
dB/octave. On the other hand, sensory cell loss (OHC loss) will result
in a slope much steeper than that associated with metabolic
presbyacusis (Gates et al., 1990 ; Jerger et al., 1993 ). At low
frequencies, a similar argument can be made. Metabolic presbyacusis
should result in an essentially flat loss, whereas apical sensorineural
loss will be additive, yielding a profile that slopes toward low
frequencies. This sloping loss at low frequencies is seen in our oldest
gerbils (Fig. 7), which have substantial hair cell loss in the apex
despite being raised in a low-noise environment. Apical hair cell loss
is also found in other aging models (Bhattacharyya and Dayal, 1985 ).
Thus, our furosemide model of presbyacusis suggests ways in which human audiograms can be interpreted with regard to specific cochlear pathologies. Moreover, it provides insight as to the operation of the
cochlear amplifier along the cochlear spiral.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 24, 2002; revised Aug. 22, 2002; accepted Aug. 27, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National
Institute on Aging Grant AG14748 (R.A.S.) and NIH/National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant DC00713 (B.A.S.).
Correspondence should be addressed to R. A. Schmiedt, Medical
University of South Carolina/ENT Research, Walton Research Building, 39 Sabin Street, Room 608, P.O. Box 250150, Charleston, SC 29425. E-mail:
schmiera{at}musc.edu.
 |
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