We have developed a reliable protocol for the serum-free dissociation and culture of spiral ganglion neurons from adult mice, an important animal model for patients with post-lingual hearing loss. Pilot experiments indicated that the viability of spiral ganglion cells in vitro depended critically on the use of Hibernate medium with B27 supplement. With an optimized protocol, we obtained 2 ?? 10^3 neurons immediately after dissociation, or about one-fifth of those present in the intact spiral ganglion. After four days in culture, 4% of the seeded neurons survived without any exogenous growth factors other than insulin. This yield was highly reproducible in five independent experiments and enabled us to measure systematically the numbers and ...
The peripheral hearing process taking place in the cochlea mainly depends on two distinct sensory ce...
The mammalian auditory system is sensitive to genetic disorders, aging and injuries caused by overst...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1999 publishe...
We have developed a reliable protocol for the serum-free dissociation and culture of spiral ganglion...
Hearing loss can develop as a consequence of primary auditory neuron degeneration. These neurons are...
Objectives The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and exci...
The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and excitability of...
The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and excitability of...
Spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs), the target cells of the cochlear implant, undergo gradual degenerati...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1997 publishe...
Cells in our bodies with the most specialized functions are often the most vulnerable to death by di...
AbstractBackgroundSensorineural deafness is mainly caused by damage to hair cells and degeneration o...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in NeuroReport 1997. This version is reproduce...
Although the majority of human illnesses occur during adulthood, most of the available in vitro dise...
The peripheral hearing process taking place in the cochlea mainly depends on two distinct sensory ce...
The peripheral hearing process taking place in the cochlea mainly depends on two distinct sensory ce...
The mammalian auditory system is sensitive to genetic disorders, aging and injuries caused by overst...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1999 publishe...
We have developed a reliable protocol for the serum-free dissociation and culture of spiral ganglion...
Hearing loss can develop as a consequence of primary auditory neuron degeneration. These neurons are...
Objectives The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and exci...
The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and excitability of...
The functionality of cochlear implants (CI) depends, among others, on the number and excitability of...
Spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs), the target cells of the cochlear implant, undergo gradual degenerati...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1997 publishe...
Cells in our bodies with the most specialized functions are often the most vulnerable to death by di...
AbstractBackgroundSensorineural deafness is mainly caused by damage to hair cells and degeneration o...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in NeuroReport 1997. This version is reproduce...
Although the majority of human illnesses occur during adulthood, most of the available in vitro dise...
The peripheral hearing process taking place in the cochlea mainly depends on two distinct sensory ce...
The peripheral hearing process taking place in the cochlea mainly depends on two distinct sensory ce...
The mammalian auditory system is sensitive to genetic disorders, aging and injuries caused by overst...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1999 publishe...