Effects of age and cochlear damage on the metabolic activity of the avian cochlear nucleus
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文摘
Most aging commercially raised broiler chickens display a progressive loss of cochlear hair cells in a pattern similar to the cochlear degeneration found in aging humans: basal (high frequency) hair cells are affected first, followed by apical (low frequency) hair cells [Durham et al., Hear. Res. 166 (2002) 82–95]. Here, cochlear anatomy was assessed from scanning electron micrographs. Then, the metabolic activity of cochlear nucleus (nucleus magnocellularis, NM) neurons in 15–19, 30, 39, 40, and 65–66 week old broiler chickens was examined using cytochrome oxidase histochemistry and compared to the degree of cochlear abnormality. Cochleae of 15–19 week old birds are largely normal; therefore the level of NM metabolic activity is considered the baseline. Cochleae of the 30 week old group display mild damage and hair cell regeneration in the base. Metabolic activity in rostral (high frequency) NM is increased relative to the baseline, while activity remains unchanged in caudal (low frequency) NM. The 39 and 65–66 week old groups display severe and total damage extending into the apex of the cochlea. Metabolic activity is decreased in rostral and caudal NM at these ages. These results suggest that auditory central nervous system metabolism (cytochrome oxidase activity) is affected by changes in the aging chicken cochlea.

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