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Título
Age-related central gain compensation for reduced auditory nerve output for people with normal audiograms, with and without tinnitus
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
biological sciences
neuroscience
sensory neuroscience
Clasificación UNESCO
3213.05 Cirugía de Garganta, Nariz y Oídos
2410 Biología Humana
neurociencia
Fecha de publicación
2021-05-28
Resumen
Central gain compensation for reduced auditory nerve output has been hypothesized as a mechanism for tinnitus with a normal audiogram. Here, we investigate if gain compensation occurs with aging. For 94 people (aged 12-68 years, 64 women, 7 tinnitus) with normal or close-to-normal audiograms, the amplitude of wave I of the auditory brainstem response decreased with increasing age but was not correlated with wave V amplitude after accounting for age-related subclinical hearing loss and cochlear damage, a result indicative of age-related gain compensation. The correlations between age and wave I/III or III/V amplitude ratios suggested that compensation occurs at the wave III generator site. For each one of the seven participants with non-pulsatile tinnitus, the amplitude of wave I, wave V, and the wave I/V amplitude ratio were well within the confidence limits of the non-tinnitus participants. We conclude that increased central gain occurs with aging and is not specific to tinnitus.
URI
ISSN
2589-0042
DOI
10.1016/j.isci.2021.102658
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