Sl. Mcfadden et al., LOW-FREQUENCY CONDITIONING PROVIDES LONG-TERM PROTECTION FROM NOISE-INDUCED THRESHOLD SHIFTS IN CHINCHILLAS, Hearing research, 103(1-2), 1997, pp. 142-150
Studies have shown that loss of auditory sensitivity caused by exposur
e to high-level acoustic stimuli can be significantly reduced by pre-e
xposing the subject to moderate-level acoustic stimuli. Although the p
rotective effects of such 'conditioning' exposures have been well docu
mented, very little is known about the persistence of conditioning-ind
uced protection, or about the biological mechanisms underlying it. In
the present study, the persistence of conditioning-induced protection
was examined in chinchillas by imposing either a 30- or 60-day recover
y period between conditioning (10 days of exposure to 0.5 kHz noise at
90 or 95 dB, 6 h/day) and high-level (0.5 kHz noise at 106 dB for 48
h) exposures. Comparisons of threshold shifts between conditioned anim
als and control animals exposed only to high-level noise indicated tha
t conditioning provided significant protection from noise-induced thre
shold shifts for at least 2 months. Conditioned animals sustained oute
r hair cell losses similar to controls, ranging from 15 to 30% in the
apical half of the cochlea. The results suggest that low-frequency con
ditioning can trigger long-lasting changes in cochlear homeostasis rat
her than temporary changes in physiology or reductions in susceptibili
ty to hair cell loss in chinchillas.