Examining the auditory nerve fiber response to high rate cochlear implant stimulation: chronic sensorineural hearing loss and facilitation.

2010 
Neural prostheses, such as cochlear and retinal implants, induce perceptual responses by electrically stimulating sensory nerves. These devices restore sensory system function by using patterned electrical stimuli to evoke neural responses. An understanding of their function requires knowledge of the nerves responses to relevant electrical stimuli as well as the likely effects of pathology on nerve function. We describe how sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) affects the response properties of single auditory nerve fibers (ANFs) to electrical stimuli relevant to cochlear implants. The response of 188 individual ANFs were recorded in response to trains of stimuli presented at 200, 1,000, 2,000, and 5,000 pulse/s in acutely and chronically deafened guinea pigs. The effects of stimulation rate and SNHL on ANF responses during the 0–2 ms period following stimulus onset were examined to minimize the influence of ANF adaptation. As stimulation rate increased to 5,000 pulse/s, threshold decreased, dynamic range increased and first spike latency decreased. Similar effects of stimulation rate were observed following chronic SNHL, although onset threshold and first spike latency were reduced and onset dynamic range increased compared with acutely deafened animals. Facilitation, defined as an increased nerve excitability caused by subthreshold stimulation, was observed in both acute and chronic SNHL groups, although the magnitude of its effect was diminished in the latter. These results indicate that facilitation, demonstrated here using stimuli similar to those used in cochlear implants, influences the ANF response to pulsatile electrical stimulation and may have important implications for cochlear implant signal processing strategies.
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