Abstract: | Behavioral studies of hearing loss produced by exposure to ototraumatic agents in experimental animals, combined with the anatomical evaluation of end-organ pathology, have provided useful information about the relation between dysfunction and pathology. However, in order to attribute a given hearing loss to some pattern of cochlear damage, it is necessary to test each ear independently. The objective of the present study was to evaluate attenuation measured behaviorally and protection to the cochlea provided by removal of the malleus and incus in noise-exposed chinchillas. Results from one behaviorally trained chinchilla with ossicular removal indicated a conductive hearing loss that varied from 41 dB at 0.125 kHz to 81 dB at 4.8 kHz and averaged 60 dB. Counts of missing sensory cells in ears of seven chinchillas with unilateral ossicular removal and exposure to noise (octave band centered at 0.5 kHz, 95 dB SPL, for durations up to 216 days, or centered at 4.0 kHz, 108 dB SPL, for 1.75 h) showed no more cell loss on the protected side than in age-matched control ears. From these data it is concluded that ossicular removal provides enough attenuation to protect the chinchilla cochlea from damage during these noise exposures, and that it will insure monaural responses behaviorally as long as the hearing loss in the test ear does not exceed that in the ear with ossicular removal by approximately 50 dB at any frequency. |