Modulation of activity in starling cochlear ganglion units by middle-ear muscle contractions, perilymph movements and lagena stimuli.

H Oeckinghaus
Author Information

Abstract

In the present study three groups of cochlear ganglion neurons were detected which differed in respect to their tone-evoked and spontaneous activity: auditory units which showed an irregular spontaneous discharge, non-auditory neurones with regular activity and such with an irregular spontaneous discharge pattern. Electrically-elicited contractions of the middle-ear muscle influenced the tone-evoked and/or the spontaneous activity of the auditory and the non-auditory neurones with irregular spontaneous discharge but not, however, the regularly firing units. Similar results were obtained with imposed perilymph movements in the cochlea (evoked via the vestibular system. Fractions of all three groups of cochlear ganglion neurones were responsive to direct deformations of the membraneous lagena. Several (auditory and non-auditory) units with irregular discharge were excited during a basilar membrane displacement towards scala vestibuli whereas a basilar membrane motion towards scala tympani resulted in a decrease of the discharge rate. A few units showed a different reaction. The results provide evidence that the neurones with periodic spontaneous discharge innervate the lagena and that this sense organ has no auditory significance in birds. The peripheral origin of the 'non-auditory' neurones with irregular spontaneous activity remains undecided and might be the macula lagenae or the apical portion of the basilar papilla.

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MeSH Term

Action Potentials
Animals
Biomechanical Phenomena
Birds
Cochlea
Ear, Middle
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Female
Labyrinthine Fluids
Male
Muscle Contraction
Perilymph
Pitch Perception
Spiral Ganglion

Word Cloud

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