Open Research is currently re-indexing its items due to scheduled maintenance on Saturday 14th March 2026. As such not all items in the collection may be searchable at this time.

Changes in Prefrontal Cortex-Thalamic Circuitry after Acoustic Trauma

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Barry, Kristin
Robertson, Donald
Mulders, Wilhelmina H A M

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

In the adult auditory system, loss of input resulting from peripheral deafferentation is well known to lead to plasticity in the central nervous system, manifested as reorganization of cortical maps and altered activity throughout the central auditory pathways. The auditory system also has strong afferent and efferent connections with cortico-limbic circuitry including the prefrontal cortex and the question arises whether this circuitry is also affected by loss of peripheral input. Recent studies in our laboratory showed that PFC activation can modulate activity of the auditory thalamus or medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) in normal hearing rats. In addition, we have shown in rats that cochlear trauma resulted in altered spontaneous burst firing in MGN. However, whether the PFC influence on MGN is changed after cochlear trauma is unknown. We investigated the effects of electrical stimulation of PFC on single neuron activity in the MGN in anaesthetized Wistar rats 2 weeks after acoustic trauma or sham surgery. Electrical stimulation of PFC showed a variety of effects in MGN neurons both in sham and acoustic trauma groups but inhibitory responses were significantly larger in the acoustic trauma animals. These results suggest an alteration in functional connectivity between PFC and MGN after cochlear trauma. This change may be a compensatory mechanism increasing sensory gating after the development of altered spontaneous activity in MGN, to prevent altered activity reaching the cortex and conscious perception.

Description

Citation

Source

Biomedicines

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license

Restricted until