Isoflurane anesthesia suppresses distortion product otoacoustic emissions in rats

  • Adam M. Sheppard
  • Deng-Ling Zhao
  • Richard Salvi
Publication date
June 2018
Publisher
Elsevier BV
ISSN
1672-2930
Journal
Journal of Otology
Citation count (estimate)
2

Abstract

A commonly used anesthetic, isoflurane, can impair auditory function in a dose-dependent manner. However, in rats, isoflurane-induced auditory impairments have only been assessed with auditory brainstem responses; a measure which is unable to distinguish if changes originate from the central or peripheral auditory system. Studies performed in other species, such as mice and guinea-pigs, suggests auditory impairment stems from disrupted OHC amplification. Despite the wide use of the rat in auditory research, these observations have yet to be replicated in the rat animal model. This study used distortion product otoacoustic emissions to assess outer hair cell function in rats that were anesthetized with either isoflurane or a ketamine/xylazin...

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