Abstract
AbstractObjective assays of human cochlear synaptopathy (CS) have been challenging to develop. It’s suspected if relative summating potential (SP) changes are different in CS listeners. In this proof-of-concept study, young, normal-hearing adults were recruited and assigned to a low/high-risk group for having CS based on their audiograms at 9-16 kHz. SPs to paired-clicks with varying inter-click intervals isolated non-refractory receptor components of cochlear activity. Abrupt increases in SPs to paired- vs. single-clicks were observed in high-risk listeners. Critically, overexaggerated SPs predicted speech-in-noise and subjective hearing abilities, suggesting relative SP changes to rapid clicks might help identify putative synaptopathic listeners.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory