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Título
Evidence for age-related cochlear synaptopathy in humans unconnected to speech-in-noise intelligibility deficits
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Auditory brainstem response
Synaptopathy
Auditory deafferentation
Noise exposure
Speech-in-noise
Clasificación UNESCO
2490 Neurociencias
3213 Cirugía
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Johannesen, P.T., Buzo, B.C., López Poveda, E.A. (2019). Evidence for age-related cochlear synaptopathy in humans unconnected to speech-in-noise intelligibility deficits. Hearing Research, 374, pp. 35-48.
Resumen
[EN] Cochlear synaptopathy (or the loss of primary auditory synapses) remains a subclinical condition of
uncertain prevalence. Here, we investigate whether it affects humans and whether it contributes to
suprathreshold speech-in-noise intelligibility deficits. For 94 human listeners with normal audiometry (aged 12e68 years; 64 women), we measured click-evoked auditory brainstem responses (ABRs), self-
reported lifetime noise exposure, and speech reception thresholds for sentences (at 65 dB SPL) and words (at 50, 65 and 80 dB SPL) in steady-state and fluctuating maskers. Based on animal research, we
assumed that the shallower the rate of growth of ABR wave-I amplitude versus level function, the higher
the risk of suffering from synaptopathy. We found that wave-I growth rates decreased with increasing
age but not with increasing noise exposure. Speech reception thresholds in noise were not correlated
with wave-I growth rates and mean speech reception thresholds were not statistically different for two
subgroups of participants (N 1⁄4 14) with matched audiograms (up to 12 kHz) but different wave-I growth rates. Altogether, the data are consistent with the existence of age-related but not noise-related syn-
aptopathy. In addition, the data dispute the notion that synaptopathy contributes to suprathreshold speech-in-noise intelligibility deficits.
URI
ISSN
0378-5955
DOI
10.1016/j.heares.2019.01.017
Versión del editor
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