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Homeostatic plasticity drives tinnitus perception in an animal model.


ABSTRACT: Hearing loss often results in tinnitus and auditory cortical map changes, leading to the prevailing view that the phantom perception is associated with cortical reorganization. However, we show here that tinnitus is mediated by a cortical area lacking map reorganization. High-frequency hearing loss results in two distinct cortical regions: a sensory-deprived region characterized by a decrease in inhibitory synaptic transmission and a normal hearing region showing increases in inhibitory and excitatory transmission and map reorganization. Hearing-lesioned animals displayed tinnitus with a pitch in the hearing loss range. Furthermore, drugs that enhance inhibition, but not those that reduce excitation, reversibly eliminated the tinnitus behavior. These results suggest that sensory deprivation-induced homeostatic down-regulation of inhibitory synapses may contribute to tinnitus perception. Enhancing sensory input through map reorganization may plausibly alleviate phantom sensation.

SUBMITTER: Yang S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3169130 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Homeostatic plasticity drives tinnitus perception in an animal model.

Yang Sungchil S   Weiner Benjamin D BD   Zhang Li S LS   Cho Sung-Jin SJ   Bao Shaowen S  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110906 36


Hearing loss often results in tinnitus and auditory cortical map changes, leading to the prevailing view that the phantom perception is associated with cortical reorganization. However, we show here that tinnitus is mediated by a cortical area lacking map reorganization. High-frequency hearing loss results in two distinct cortical regions: a sensory-deprived region characterized by a decrease in inhibitory synaptic transmission and a normal hearing region showing increases in inhibitory and exci  ...[more]

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