Project 1 ABSTRACT Our long-term goal is to ameliorate the debilitating consequences of age-related hearing loss (ARHL; presbycusis) that are known to impact nearly 70% percent of Americans over the age of 70. ARHL interferes with effective communication by reducing the audibility of sounds, and degrading the intelligibility of speech in quiet and noisy backgrounds. The overall objective of this research is to identify and understand effective methods for modulating ARHL. The central hypothesis of this is that targeted therapeutic interventions will induce plasticity within the peripheral and central auditory system, altering the function of complex gain mechanisms, leading to amelioration of chronic deficits that define presbycusis. This pioneering research uses innovative catalysts to induce functional changes in the aging auditory system. We will leverage cross-project comparative methods to identify the perceptual, neurophysiological, and molecular bases of the resulting peripheral and central auditory plasticity.
Aim 1 focuses on the potential to use hormone (aldosterone) supplementation to improve peripheral and central auditory function.
Aims 2 and 3 test a series of hypotheses that establish the nature and magnitude of neural plasticity in older adults induced by augmented acoustic environments (AAE). Targeted ARHL deficits include loudness growth, temporal processing, and speech in noise processing. A combination of behavioral and electrophysiological measures and a combination of longitudinal and cross-sectional designs will serve as the basis for the broader comparative research of this proposal. The comprehensive framework proposed here is the first to our knowledge combining basic and applied methods to address central auditory plasticity and the amelioration of AHRL in a manner that allows rapid translation of findings to clinical practice ? the foremost goal of NIA and NIH at large.

Public Health Relevance

Project 1 NARRATIVE The goal of this project is to identify and understand methods for slowing, halting, or reversing the causes and symptoms of age-related hearing loss (presbycusis). Using separate methods, we will evaluate potential for a hormone intervention to improve inner ear and central auditory function and we will use hearing instruments to induce neural plasticity to and to target hallmark deficits of presbycusis and identify age-related differences in susceptibility to central auditory plasticity.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01AG009524-23
Application #
9440944
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2018-03-01
Budget End
2019-02-28
Support Year
23
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of South Florida
Department
Type
DUNS #
069687242
City
Tampa
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
33612
Hoover, Eric C; Eddins, Ann C; Eddins, David A (2018) Distribution of spectral modulation transfer functions in a young, normal-hearing population. J Acoust Soc Am 143:306
Eddins, Ann Clock; Eddins, David A (2018) Cortical Correlates of Binaural Temporal Processing Deficits in Older Adults. Ear Hear 39:594-604
Ozmeral, Erol J; Eddins, Ann C; Eddins, David A (2018) How Do Age and Hearing Loss Impact Spectral Envelope Perception? J Speech Lang Hear Res 61:2376-2385
Walton, Joseph P; Dziorny, Adam C; Vasilyeva, Olga N et al. (2018) Loss of the Cochlear Amplifier Prestin Reduces Temporal Processing Efficacy in the Central Auditory System. Front Cell Neurosci 12:291
Eddins, Ann Clock; Ozmeral, Erol J; Eddins, David A (2018) How aging impacts the encoding of binaural cues and the perception of auditory space. Hear Res 369:79-89
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Bazard, Parveen; Frisina, Robert D; Walton, Joseph P et al. (2017) Nanoparticle-based Plasmonic Transduction for Modulation of Electrically Excitable Cells. Sci Rep 7:7803
Watson, Nathan; Ding, Bo; Zhu, Xiaoxia et al. (2017) Chronic inflammation - inflammaging - in the ageing cochlea: A novel target for future presbycusis therapy. Ageing Res Rev 40:142-148
Brecht, Elliott J; Barsz, Kathy; Gross, Benjamin et al. (2017) Increasing GABA reverses age-related alterations in excitatory receptive fields and intensity coding of auditory midbrain neurons in aged mice. Neurobiol Aging 56:87-99
Halonen, Joshua; Hinton, Ashley S; Frisina, Robert D et al. (2016) Long-term treatment with aldosterone slows the progression of age-related hearing loss. Hear Res 336:63-71

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