Destruction of cochlear hair cells initiates degenerative changes within auditory nerve fibres (ANFs), including loss of peripheral processes and demyelination of the cell body. These changes are likely to affect the biophysical processes involved in action potential generation to an electrical stimulus. We measured the strength-duration relationship in acutely deafened (100% ANF survival) versus long-term deafened cochleae (approximately 15% ANF survival) by recording from single neurons in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC). Input/output functions were constructed for 22 ICC neurons in response to stimulation of the auditory nerve using biphasic current pulses of 20-1000 micros/phase. Strength-duration curves were derived and found to be of the same general form for both acute and long-term deafened cochleae. While there was an increase in rheobase for neurons from long-term versus acute deafened cochleae, this increase was not statistically significant (p=0.097). In contrast, chronaxie--which is related to the membrane time constant--was significantly shorter in the long-term deafened cochleae (p = 0.004). This presumably reflects a shift in the site of action potential initiation to the larger diameter, heavily myelinated central axon as a result of the pathology. These changes in the site of action potential generation have implications for the delivery of charge to ANFs via cochlear implants.