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ASPartOfMe
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21 Dec 2022, 8:35 am

Beyond the brain: A link between hearing loss and autism spectrum disorder

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A cross-disciplinary team of researchers in the College of Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) has discovered hearing impairment in a preclinical model of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). More specifically, the researchers report in the Journal of Neuroscience that they observed mild hearing loss and defects in auditory nerve function. Closer examination of the nerve tissue revealed abnormal supportive cells called glia, aging-like degeneration and inflammation. The findings from this study highlight the importance of considering sensory organs and their interactions with the brain in understanding ASD

Many patients with ASD show increased sensitivity to sound. While many scientists in the past have looked to the brain for an underlying cause, the MUSC team took a different approach by studying the peripheral hearing system.

“Hearing impairment may have an impact on the higher-level auditory system and, eventually, cognitive function,” said Hainan Lang, M.D., Ph.D., professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at MUSC and one of two senior authors of the study. Jeffrey Rumschlag, Ph.D., a postdoctoral researcher in the MUSC Hearing Research Program, is a co-first author of the manuscript.

Previous studies of aging-related hearing loss showed that the brain can increase its response to make up for reduced auditory signals from the inner ear. Lang wanted to find out if this increase, called central gain, could contribute to abnormal brain response to sound in ASD. However, a significant obstacle lay in her path.

“We didn’t have a clinically relevant model to directly test this important fundamental question,” she said.

The preclinical model that would allow Lang to test her hypothesis was developed in the lab of Christopher Cowan, Ph.D., chair of Neuroscience at MUSC. Mice in this model have only one working copy of a gene called MEF2C. Cowan’s group had studied MEF2C in the past for its role in brain development and found that it was important for regulating circuit formation in the brain. They became especially interested in creating a preclinical model when a group of patients with ASD-like symptoms were identified with MEF2C mutations. Cowan’s models also show ASD-like behaviors, including increased activity, repetitive behavior and communication deficits.

Lang and Cowan’s collaboration began as they presented posters side by side at an orientation for the College of Graduate Studies at MUSC. Lang’s lab had identified molecular regulators, including MEF2C, crucial for inner ear development, and she saw Cowan’s model as something she could use to test her hypothesis about hearing loss in neurodevelopmental diseases. Cowan enthusiastically agreed, and the research team began to assess the ability of the MEF2C-deficient mice to hear.

They first measured the response of the brain to auditory signals, using a modified version of a test that is commonly used to screen newborn infants for hearing loss. Mild hearing loss was observed in the mice with only one working copy of MEF2C while hearing remained normal in those with two working copies. To investigate this loss further, the researchers measured the activity of the auditory nerve, which carries signals from the inner ear to the brain. They found reduced activity in this nerve in mice with only one copy of MEF2C.

With their sights set on the auditory nerve, the researchers used advanced microscopes and staining techniques to determine what was going wrong. Although the overall hearing sensitivity loss was mild, the researchers were excited to see a big difference in auditory nerve response. Nerves from mice with a single copy of MEF2C showed cellular degeneration much like that seen in age-related hearing loss. The researchers also saw signs of increased inflammation, with disrupted blood vessels and activated immune cells called glia and macrophages. This finding was especially surprising to the researchers.

“Glial cells were not my first thought; I thought it was a neuronal change,” said Lang. “Now we understand that auditory nerve activity can also involve the immune system, and that's the beautiful new direction we want to continue to study.”

Cowan also believes that the finding opens the way for a new area of neuroscience research.

“We have more appreciation now that there is an important interaction between the immune system in your body and the immune system in your brain,” he said. “The two systems play critical roles in shaping how nervous system cells communicate with each other, in part, by pruning excess or inappropriate connections that have formed, and this is an essential aspect of healthy brain development and function.”


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kraftiekortie
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21 Dec 2022, 8:37 am

I seem to have somewhat "selective" hearing-----and, as I age, I believe I've actually lost some hearing.



Joe90
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21 Dec 2022, 11:55 am

Most people lose their hearing as they age.

Hearing loss runs in my family and I was born with ear problems so I'll probably be deaf before I'm 60.


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Mountain Goat
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21 Dec 2022, 12:21 pm

Since the constant high pitched vibration since wifi came in, it deafened my ability to hear bats. I can hear them a little but nothing like I once did.
I used to switch off the router so I could get to sleep but was told off for doing so and had to endure months of sleeping problems until eventually my ears deafened to the loud WIFI sound.


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IsabellaLinton
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21 Dec 2022, 12:32 pm

I enrolled my daughter as part of a clinical research study on infant hearing at the local university, when she was about five months old. It was several weeks of testing. They put her in a little booth and recorded her response to different sounds coming from different directions. I wish I had the report findings. She's HFA although we didn't know that at the time, and I remember they did identify some abnormalities with her hearing.

She has since been diagnosed with a severe autoimmune disorder which causes inflammation, so I wouldn't be surprised if her auditory system is inflamed or damaged as a result. This also ties in with that book called Brain Energy which people were discussing in another thread. It was about systemic inflammation and its effect on the brain.

I have hyperacusis, misophonia, and 24/7 bilateral tinnitus. I haven't done a hearing test in a long time but I think I was recommended for a hearing aid which I couldn't afford. My brother (undiagnosed ASD) is deaf in one ear (and now blind too, go figure.) Many people in my family are deaf in one ear from childhood and we're all quite ND.

It makes sense that damage to our sensory system would be part of ASD.


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