Hearing research
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Tinnitus is the percept of sound that is not related to an acoustic source outside the body. For many forms of tinnitus, mechanisms in the central nervous system are believed to play an important role in the pathology. Specifically, three mechanisms have been proposed to underlie tinnitus: (1) changes in the level of spontaneous neural activity in the central auditory system, (2) changes in the temporal pattern of neural activity, and (3) reorganization of tonotopic maps. ⋯ Also, neural activity in non-auditory areas including the frontal areas, the limbic system and the cerebellum seems associated with the perception of tinnitus. These results indicate that in addition to the auditory system, non-auditory systems may represent a neural correlate of tinnitus. Although the currently published neuroimaging studies typically show a correspondence between tinnitus and enhanced neural activity, it will be important to perform future studies on subject groups that are closely matched for characteristics such as age, gender and hearing loss in order to rule out the contribution of these factors to the abnormalities specifically ascribed to tinnitus.
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The purpose of this study was to investigate protein expression profiles of salicylate ototoxicity using proteomic analysis, and to identify whether salicylates induce apoptosis in organotypic culture of mouse cochlear cells. The adult mice were injected intraperitoneally with 400mg/kg of sodium salicylate. Approximately 30dB threshold shift was observed 3h after the injection, and the hearing threshold returned to normal range within 3 days. ⋯ The mRNA expressions of nine selected genes from 16 up-regulated protein profiles were also investigated by RT-PCR, and their expression levels at 3h were found to be higher than those of normal cochlea. We also confirmed the ototoxicity of salicylate in organotypic culture of cochlear cells using MTT assay, Hoechst staining and DNA laddering assay in vitro, and found that salicylate decreased the viability of cells in a time and dose-dependent manner, and that induced apoptosis in organotypic culture of cochlear cells. This study demonstrated that some proteins can be related to salicylate ototoxicity, and provides basic information about candidate proteins which are related to pathologic changes in salicylate-induced ototoxicity.