Strial dysfunction in mice with cochleo-saccular abnormalities

Hear Res. 1987;27(1):11-26. doi: 10.1016/0378-5955(87)90022-0.

Abstract

Most viable dominant spotting (Wv/Wv) mutant mice, which show cochleo-saccular degeneration, were found to have an endocochlear potential (EP) around zero together with a structurally abnormal stria vascularis. Inner hair cells were well preserved, but outer hair cells in the basal half of the cochlea were degenerating, possibly as a result of primary strial dysfunction. Thresholds for the detection of a compound action potential were raised to around 100 dB SPL in the mutants with no EP, and there was little if any cochlear microphonic at the round window. Of the 20 Wv/Wv mice studied, five partially escaped the effects of the mutation and had measurable positive potentials (15-86 mV) in scala media in the basal turn; responses in these animals were intermediate between control responses and those of mutants with no EP. These findings confirm that the pathological processes in this mutant, with cochleo-saccular abnormalities, are fundamentally different from the pathological processes in animals with neuroepithelial abnormalities reported previously [see Steel and Bock (1983) Arch. Otolaryngol. 109, 22-29, for references].

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Auditory Threshold / physiology
  • Cochlea / abnormalities*
  • Cochlea / physiopathology*
  • Cochlear Microphonic Potentials
  • Evoked Potentials, Auditory
  • Mice
  • Mice, Mutant Strains
  • Saccule and Utricle / abnormalities*
  • Stria Vascularis / pathology
  • Stria Vascularis / physiopathology*
  • Stria Vascularis / ultrastructure