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Cochlear histopathology in macaques after noise-induced temporary threshold shifts

Mondul, J.; Mackey, C. A.; Conner, A. N.; Alek, C. A.; Pitchford, D.; Rausis, O.; Liberman, L.; Liberman, C.; Ramachandran, R.; Hackett, T. A.

2025-11-16 neuroscience
10.1101/2025.11.14.688497 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Noise exposures causing transient hearing loss were previously considered benign. However, recent work has revealed that temporary noise-induced threshold shifts may be associated with long-lasting cochlear histopathology. One such effect is cochlear synaptopathy, i.e. changes to the afferent synapse between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers. Noise-induced synaptopathy has been extensively characterized in several rodent models, and temporal bone studies suggest similar age-related changes in humans. However, it remains unclear how noise-induced temporary threshold shifts affect cochlear structures in humans and nonhuman primates, which show greater resistance to noise exposure than other animals. Additionally, the long-term sequelae of temporary threshold shifts are largely unknown. Here, we characterized the effects of a noise exposure causing temporary hearing loss on cochlear histopathology in macaque monkeys at long post-exposure survival times. Overall, cochlear histopathology was variable across subjects, similar to the variable susceptibility observed in humans. At 2 and 10 months post-exposure, macaques had no significant loss of hair cells, inner hair cell synapses, or cholinergic efferent innervation. However, enlargement of ribbons in both inner and outer hair cells was observed. Together, these findings provide insight into the cochlear effects of single-exposure temporary threshold shifts in nonhuman primates. HIGHLIGHTS- Macaques exposed to 120 dB SPL noise for 4h showed temporary threshold shifts - Cochlear histopathology was evaluated at 2 and 10 months post-exposure - Macaques had no significant loss of hair cells or inner hair cell synapses - Chronic enlargement of inner and outer hair cell ribbons was observed - Transient loss of outer hair cell ribbons was also observed

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