Physiological and Neurobiological Bases of Age-Related Hearing Loss: Biotherapeutic Implications

Author:

Frisina Robert D.1,Frisina D. Robert1

Affiliation:

1. University of South Florida, Tampa

Abstract

Purpose The aim of this study was to highlight growing evidence of interactions between hormones and the structure and function of the auditory system. Method Recent studies implicating sex hormones and other natural hormones in the modulation of hearing status in age-related hearing loss were reviewed. Results Progesterone, a sex hormone, has been shown to have negative effects on the hearing of older women and aging mice, whereas, in contrast, estrogen was found in some cases to have a positive influence. Aldosterone, used in studies of animal models of autoimmune hearing loss, slowed the progression of hearing loss. Follow-up studies in humans revealed that auditory measures varied as serum aldosterone levels shifted within the normal range, in otherwise healthy older subjects. This was true for simple as well as complex auditory tasks (i.e., sound spatial processing), suggesting benefits of aldosterone to postperipheral auditory processing as well. In addition, evidence suggests that this functional hearing improvement occurred in association with anatomical improvements to the stria vascularis—an important site of anatomical change in presbycusis. Conclusions Audiology is now at the point where the search for biomedical interventions to modulate or prevent age-related hearing loss can move forward. Such interventions would require multidisciplinary collaborative initiatives by researchers in such areas as drug development, anatomy, auditory physiological and perceptual testing, and drug microdelivery systems.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing

Reference24 articles.

1. Sexual hearing: The influence of sex hormones on acoustic communication in frogs;Arch V. S.;Hearing Research,2009

2. Murine intracochlear drug delivery: Reducing concentration gradients within the cochlea;Borkholder D. A.;Hearing Research,2010

3. Sex hormones and hearing: A pioneering area of enquiry [Special issue];Canlon B.;Hearing Research,2009

4. Novel membrane receptors for aldosterone in human lymphocytes: A 50 kDa protein on SDS-PAGE;Eisen C.;Cellular & Molecular Biology,1994

5. Speech recognition in noise and presbycusis: Relations to possible neural sites;Frisina D. R.;Hearing Research,1997

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