UK Researchers Identify Key Cellular Mechanisms for Onset
of Tinnitus
Editor: Here's more good news in the effort to provide effective
treatments for tinnitus. Let's hope that this discovery quickly leads to a
treatment!
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May 2012
Researchers in the University of Leicester's Department of Cell
Physiology and Pharmacology have identified a cellular mechanism that could
underlie the development of tinnitus following exposure to loud noises. The
discovery could lead to novel tinnitus treatments, and investigations into
potential drugs to prevent tinnitus are currently underway.
Although hearing loss and tinnitus affect around 10% of the population,
there are currently no drugs available to treat or prevent tinnitus.
University of Leicester researcher Dr Martine Hamann, who led the study
published in the journal Hearing Research, said in the press statement, "We
need to know the implications of acoustic over exposure, not only in terms
of hearing loss but also what's happening in the brain and central nervous
system. It's believed that tinnitus results from changes in excitability in
cells in the brain - cells become more reactive, in this case more reactive
to an unknown sound."
Hamann and her team, including PhD student Nadia Pilati, looked at cells
in an area of the brain called the dorsal cochlear nucleus - the relay
carrying signals from nerve cells in the ear to the parts of the brain that
decode and make sense of sounds. Following exposure to loud noises, some of
the nerve cells (neurons) in the dorsal cochlear nucleus start to fire
erratically, and this uncontrolled activity eventually leads to tinnitus.
Hamann said, "We showed that exposure to loud sound triggers hearing loss
a few days after the exposure to the sound. It also triggers this
uncontrolled activity in the neurons of the dorsal cochlear nucleus. This is
all happening very quickly, in a matter of days"
In a key breakthrough in collaboration with Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK),
which sponsored Dr Pilati's PhD, the team also discovered the specific
cellular mechanism that leads to the neurons' over-activity. Malfunctions in
specific potassium channels that help regulate the nerve cell's electrical
activity mean the neurons cannot return to an equilibrium resting state.
Ordinarily, these cells only fire regularly and therefore regularly
return to a rest state. However, if the potassium channels are not working
properly, the cells cannot return to a rest state and instead fire
continuously in random bursts, creating the sensation of constant noise when
none exists.
Hamann explained, "In normal conditions the channel helps to drag down
the cellular electrical activity to its resting state and this allows the
cell to function with a regular pattern. After exposure to loud sound, the
channel is functioning less and therefore the cell is constantly active,
being unable to reach its resting state and displaying those irregular
bursts."
Although many researchers have investigated the mechanisms underlying
tinnitus, this is reportedly the first time that cellular bursting activity
has been characterised and linked to specific potassium channels.
Identifying the potassium channels involved in the early stages of tinnitus
opens up new possibilities for preventing tinnitus with early drug
treatments.
Hamann's team is currently investigating potential drugs that could
regulate the damaged cells, preventing their erratic firing and returning
them to a resting state. If suitable drug compounds are discovered, they
could be given to patients who have been exposed to loud noises to protect
them against the onset of tinnitus.
These investigations are still in the preliminary stages, however, and
any drug treatment is years away.
SOURCE: University of Leicester