N Bramhall, EF Beach, B Epp, CG Le Prell… - Hearing research, 2019 - Elsevier
Animal studies demonstrate that noise exposure can permanently damage the synapses between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers, even when outer hair cells are intact and …
AR Chambers, J Resnik, Y Yuan, JP Whitton, AS Edge… - Neuron, 2016 - cell.com
Sensory organ damage induces a host of cellular and physiological changes in the periphery and the brain. Here, we show that some aspects of auditory processing recover …
Cochlear synaptopathy can result from various insults, including acoustic trauma, aging, ototoxicity, or chronic conductive hearing loss. For example, moderate noise exposure in …
Noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy has been demonstrated in numerous rodent studies. In these animal models, the disorder is characterized by a reduction in amplitude of wave I of …
NF Bramhall, D Konrad-Martin, GP McMillan… - Ear and …, 2017 - journals.lww.com
Objectives: Recent animal studies demonstrated that cochlear synaptopathy, a partial loss of inner hair cell-auditory nerve fiber synapses, can occur in response to noise exposure …
AR Fetoni, F Paciello, R Rolesi, G Paludetti… - Free Radical Biology and …, 2019 - Elsevier
Hearing loss caused by exposure to recreational and occupational noise remains a worldwide disabling condition and dysregulation of redox homeostasis is the hallmark of …
Evidence from animal and human studies suggests that moderate acoustic exposure, causing only transient threshold elevation, can nonetheless cause “hidden hearing loss” that …
A Parthasarathy, SG Kujawa - Journal of Neuroscience, 2018 - Soc Neuroscience
Aging listeners, even in the absence of overt hearing loss measured as changes in hearing thresholds, often experience impairments processing temporally complex sounds such as …
AJ Oxenham - Annual review of psychology, 2018 - annualreviews.org
Auditory perception is our main gateway to communication with others via speech and music, and it also plays an important role in alerting and orienting us to new events. This …