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Enhancing the sensitivity of the envelope-following response for cochlear synaptopathy screening in humans: The role of stimulus envelope.

Authors :
Vasilkov V
Garrett M
Mauermann M
Verhulst S
Source :
Hearing research [Hear Res] 2021 Feb; Vol. 400, pp. 108132. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Dec 01.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Auditory de-afferentation, a permanent reduction in the number of inner-hair-cells and auditory-nerve synapses due to cochlear damage or synaptopathy, can reliably be quantified using temporal bone histology and immunostaining. However, there is an urgent need for non-invasive markers of synaptopathy to study its perceptual consequences in live humans and to develop effective therapeutic interventions. While animal studies have identified candidate auditory-evoked-potential (AEP) markers for synaptopathy, their interpretation in humans has suffered from translational issues related to neural generator differences, unknown hearing-damage histopathologies or lack of measurement sensitivity. To render AEP-based markers of synaptopathy more sensitive and differential to the synaptopathy aspect of sensorineural hearing loss, we followed a combined computational and experimental approach. Starting from the known characteristics of auditory-nerve physiology, we optimized the stimulus envelope to stimulate the available auditory-nerve population optimally and synchronously to generate strong envelope-following-responses (EFRs). We further used model simulations to explore which stimuli evoked a response that was sensitive to synaptopathy, while being maximally insensitive to possible co-existing outer-hair-cell pathologies. We compared the model-predicted trends to AEPs recorded in younger and older listeners (N=44, 24f) who had normal or impaired audiograms with suspected age-related synaptopathy in the older cohort. We conclude that optimal stimulation paradigms for EFR-based quantification of synaptopathy should have sharply rising envelope shapes, a minimal plateau duration of 1.7-2.1 ms for a 120-Hz modulation rate, and inter-peak intervals which contain near-zero amplitudes. From our recordings, the optimal EFR-evoking stimulus had a rectangular envelope shape with a 25% duty cycle and a 95% modulation depth. Older listeners with normal or impaired audiometric thresholds showed significantly reduced EFRs, which were consistent with how (age-induced) synaptopathy affected these responses in the model.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Ghent University filed a patent application (PCTEP2020053192) which covers some of the ideas presented in this paper. Sarah Verhulst and Viacheslav Vasilkov are inventors.<br /> (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1878-5891
Volume :
400
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Hearing research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33333426
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2020.108132