Journal article

Infrared neural stimulation fails to evoke neural activity in the deaf guinea pig cochlea

AC Thompson, JB Fallon, AK Wise, SA Wade, RK Shepherd, PR Stoddart

Hearing Research | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 2015

Abstract

At present there is some debate as to the processes by which infrared neural stimulation (INS) activates neurons in the cochlea, as the lasers used for INS can potentially generate a range of secondary stimuli e.g. an acoustic stimulus is produced when the light is absorbed by water. To clarify whether INS in the cochlea requires functioning hair cells and to explore the potential relevance to cochlear implants, experiments using INS were performed in the cochleae of both normal hearing and profoundly deaf guinea pigs. A response to laser stimulation was readily evoked in normal hearing cochlea. However, no response was evoked in any profoundly deaf cochleae, for either acute or chronic deaf..

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