The Journal of comparative neurology
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We explored the consequences of unilateral acoustic trauma to intracochlear and central nervous system structures in rats. An acoustic trauma, induced by applying click stimuli of 130 dB (sound pressure level; SPL) for 30 minutes, resulted in an instant and permanent threshold shift of 95.92 +/- 1.08 dB (SEM) in the affected ear. We observed, as a consequence, a structural deterioration of the organ of Corti. ⋯ Such cells were rarely observed after cochleotomy. An unequivocal rise in GAP-43 immunoreactivity was also found in the neuropil of the inferior colliculus and the ventral cochlear nucleus, both preferentially on the acoustically damaged side. We conclude that the degree and specific cause of sudden unilateral deafness entail specific patterns of plasticity responses in the auditory brainstem, possibly to prevent the neural network dedicated to locate sounds in the environment from delivering erroneous signals centralward.