• Hearing research · Jan 1987

    Regeneration of the tectorial membrane in the chick cochlea following severe acoustic trauma.

    • D A Cotanche.
    • Dept. of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston 29425.
    • Hear. Res. 1987 Jan 1; 30 (2-3): 197-206.

    AbstractDamage to the tectorial membrane caused by acoustic trauma was examined with scanning and transmission electron microscopy immediately after exposure and at selected time points over a 10 day recovery period. At 0 h of recovery the structure of the tectorial membrane overlying the region of hair cell damage was severely disrupted and connections between the membrane and the basilar papilla were lost. By 24 h of recovery, regeneration of the tectorial membrane was evident in the secretion of new matrix materials by the supporting cells of the basilar papilla. By 10 days of recovery a new honeycomb-like matrix had replaced the segment of damaged tectorial membrane, re-established connections with hair cell stereocilia and become fused with adjacent regions of undamaged tectorial membrane. However, the regenerated segment included only the honeycomb-like structure of the lower layer of the normal tectorial membrane. The laterally-oriented fibers which form the upper layer of the membrane were not regenerated over the damaged region. These findings indicate that the tectorial membrane is regenerated in parallel with the hair cells during recovery from acoustic trauma but the full extent of this recovery and its effect on cochlear function are not yet clear.

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