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Title: Differential effects of benzodiazepines on cochlear and auditory nerve responses. Author: Velluti R, Pedemonte M. Journal: Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol; 1986 Dec; 64(6):556-62. PubMed ID: 2430780. Abstract: The influence exerted by chlordiazepoxide or midazolam upon auditory nerve compound action potential (cAP) and cochlear microphonic (CM) has been analyzed in chronic as well as in acutely prepared guinea pigs. Pre-receptorial variables were carefully controlled. The benzodiazepines dissociated the cochlear recorded potentials, increasing the cAP amplitude, in response to clicks, and decreasing the CM area, produced by a coherent pure tone pip. Both responses were dose related. A direct effect upon the cochlea was eliminated by local infusion of the drugs. It was also demonstrated to be a specific benzodiazepinic action because the use of an antagonist, Ro 15-1788, abolished the effect. Benzodiazepines could have increased the GABAergic activity at the pontine origins of the olivo-cochlear bundle or in the reticulo-cochlear fibers. These are the only central pathways that could be responsible for the effects obtained at the cochlea or auditory nerve levels. We suggest that this is the cause of the withdrawal of inhibitory tonus from the primary afferent fibers mediated by the efferent system (lateral superior olive), as may occur during dishabituation. It may also be the cause of the CM decrement, but the effect in this case would be exerted mainly through another set of efferent fibers (trapezoid body nucleus).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]