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Dive into the research topics where Russell L. Snyder is active.

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Featured researches published by Russell L. Snyder.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1999

Chronic electrical stimulation by a cochlear implant promotes survival of spiral ganglion neurons after neonatal deafness

Patricia A. Leake; Gary T. Hradek; Russell L. Snyder

This investigation examined the consequences of neonatal deafness and chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation delivered by a cochlear implant during maturation. Kittens were bilaterally deafened by an ototoxic drug administered daily for 2 weeks immediately after birth. Unilateral electrical stimulation was initiated at 7–10 weeks of age and continued over periods of 22–47 weeks (4 hours/day; 5 days/week). Bipolar intracochlear electrodes delivered one of several different electrical signals designed to be temporally challenging to the central auditory system. Morphometric evaluation of spiral ganglion (SG) cell somata within Rosenthals canal demonstrated a mean of ≈50% of normal cell density maintained in the chronically stimulated ears, compared with ≈30% on the control deafened side. This 20% difference in density was highly significant and was greater than differences reported in earlier studies using 30 pps stimulation delivered by either intracochlear bipolar or round window monopolar electrodes. However, the duration of stimulation was also longer in the present study, so it is unclear to what extent the nature of the temporally challenging stimulation vs. its duration contributed to the marked increase in survival. Measurements of the SG cell somata revealed a pronounced decrease in cell diameter in neonatally deafened cats studied about 1 year after deafening, and an additional decrease after long‐term deafness (2.5–6.5 years). Furthermore, in the cochlear regions with the greatest stimulation‐induced differences in SG cell density, direct measurements of cross‐sectional soma area of the largest cells revealed that cells were significantly larger in the stimulated ears. Thus, in addition to the marked increase in the number of surviving SG cells, larger soma area contributed modestly to the pronounced increase in neural density following chronic electrical stimulation. J. Comp. Neurol. 412:543–562, 1999.


Hearing Research | 1991

Chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation induces selective survival of spiral ganglion neurons in neonatally deafened cats.

Patricia A. Leake; Gary T. Hradek; Stephen J. Rebscher; Russell L. Snyder

Ten newborn kittens were deafened by systemic administration of neomycin sulfate. Profound hearing losses were documented by ABR and FFR (500 Hz) testing. At 9-17 weeks of age, the young deafened cats were unilaterally implanted with a multichannel scala tympani electrode. Six of the animals were chronically stimulated at 6 dB above electrically evoked ABR thresholds for 1 h/day for periods of 1 month or 3 months. Stimuli were charge-balanced biphasic pulses (200 microseconds/phase, 30 pps.) The remaining 4 cats underwent identical deafening and implantation schedules but were not stimulated. Results indicate that administration of neomycin in neonatal cats induced degeneration of hair cells and spiral ganglion cell loss that was bilaterally symmetrical between the two cochleas of each individual animal, although there was variation between animals in the severity of the ototoxic drug effect. In animals receiving passive (unstimulated) implants, morphometric analysis of spiral ganglion cell density showed no significant difference in ganglion cell survival between the implanted cochleas and the contralateral control ears. In contrast, animals that were chronically stimulated for 3 months showed significantly better neuronal survival in implanted and stimulated cochleas as compared to contralateral deafened control ears. The induced conservation of spiral ganglion neurons was observed consistently within the basal cochlear region near the stimulating electrodes. In more apical regions there was no significant difference between the stimulated and control cochleas. The mechanisms underlying this selective conservation of spiral ganglion neurons induced by chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation are uncertain. Since no comparable chronic stimulation studies have been conducted in adults, it is not known whether similar conservation effects could be induced in mature animals.


Hearing Research | 1990

Chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation in the neonatally deafened cat. I: Expansion of central representation

Russell L. Snyder; Stephen J. Rebscher; Keli Cao; Patricia A. Leake; Kevin E. Kelly

Intracochlear electrical stimulation via cochlear prostheses has been employed as a means of providing some hearing to deaf children. Since chronically restricted stimuli are known to have profound effects on central nervous system development, it is important to examine the effects of chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation in a neonatally deafened animal model. In this study neonatally deafened cats were implanted with a scala tympani electrode consisting of two pairs of electrodes. Chronic electrical stimulation was delivered using one electrode pair and consisted of charge-balanced biphasic pulses (200 microseconds/phase, 30 pps) at 2 dB above the electrically evoked auditory brain stem response (EABR) threshold for 4 h/day or at 6 dB 1 h/day, 5 days/week, for up to 3 months. The second electrode pair was unstimulated and served as an internal control. Following chronic stimulation, acute mapping experiments were performed in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) using single unit and multi-unit recording techniques and activating each electrode pair separately. In addition to these chronically stimulated animals, 2 other groups of experimental animals were studied: A normal group consisting of prior normal adult cats that were acutely implanted; and an unstimulated control group consisting of neonatally deafened adult cats that were either acutely implanted or implanted at 8-10 weeks of age but not chronically stimulated. Among the major findings of this study are: Electrical stimulation of the intracochlear bipolar electrode consistently produces activation of a reproducibly limited sector of the ICC. The location of this activated sector was found to be consistent with the known cochleotopic organization of the ICC and the intracochlear location of the stimulating electrodes. No major differences in the spatial representation of activated electrodes were found between prior normal cats and neonatally deafened unstimulated cats. The locations, shapes and widths of these spatial representations were virtually indistinguishable indicating that ICC cochleotopic organizations were equivalent in these two experimental groups. In contrast, the ICC representation of chronically stimulated electrode pairs were found to be significantly different. The average area activated by chronically stimulated electrode pairs at 6 dB above minimum threshold was approximately twice that of unstimulated deafened animals and prior normal animals; and it was larger, but not significantly so, than the average of the unstimulated electrode pair in the same experimental group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Jaro-journal of The Association for Research in Otolaryngology | 2004

Topographic Spread of Inferior Colliculus Activation in Response to Acoustic and Intracochlear Electric Stimulation

Russell L. Snyder; Julie Arenberg Bierer; John C. Middlebrooks

The design of contemporary multichannel cochlear implants is predicated on the presumption that they activate multiple independent sectors of the auditory nerve array. The independence of these channels, however, is limited by the spread of activation from each intracochlear electrode across the auditory nerve array. In this study, we evaluated factors that influence intracochlear spread of activation using two types of intracochlear electrodes: (1) a clinical-type device consisting of a linear series of ring contacts positioned along a silicon elastomer carrier, and (2) a pair of visually placed (VP) ball electrodes that could be positioned independently relative to particular intracochlear structures, e.g., the spiral ganglion. Activation spread was estimated by recording multineuronal evoked activity along the cochleotopic axis of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC). This activity was recorded using silicon-based single-shank, 16-site recording probes, which were fixed within the ICC at a depth defined by responses to acoustic tones. After deafening, electric stimuli consisting of single biphasic electric pulses were presented with each electrode type in various stimulation configurations (monopolar, bipolar, tripolar) and/or various electrode orientations (radial, off-radial, longitudinal). The results indicate that monopolar (MP) stimulation with either electrode type produced widepread excitation across the ICC. Bipolar (BP) stimulation with banded pairs of electrodes oriented longitudinally produced activation that was somewhat less broad than MP stimulation, and tripolar (TP) stimulation produced activation that was more restricted than MP or BP stimulation. Bipolar stimulation with radially oriented pairs of VP ball electrodes produced the most restricted activation. The activity patterns evoked by radial VP balls were comparable to those produced by pure tones in normal-hearing animals. Variations in distance between radially oriented VP balls had little effect on activation spread, although increases in interelectrode spacing tended to reduce thresholds. Bipolar stimulation with longitudinally oriented VP electrodes produced broad activation that tended to broaden as the separation between electrodes increased.


Jaro-journal of The Association for Research in Otolaryngology | 2007

Auditory Prosthesis with a Penetrating Nerve Array

John C. Middlebrooks; Russell L. Snyder

Contemporary auditory prostheses (“cochlear implants”) employ arrays of stimulating electrodes implanted in the scala tympani of the cochlea. Such arrays have been implanted in some 100,000 profoundly or severely deaf people worldwide and arguably are the most successful of present-day neural prostheses. Nevertheless, most implant users show poor understanding of speech in noisy backgrounds, poor pitch recognition, and poor spatial hearing, even when using bilateral implants. Many of these limitations can be attributed to the remote location of stimulating electrodes relative to excitable cochlear neural elements. That is, a scala tympani electrode array lies within a bony compartment filled with electrically conductive fluid. Moreover, scala tympani arrays typically do not extend to the apical turn of the cochlea in which low frequencies are represented. In the present study, we have tested in an animal model an alternative to the conventional cochlear implant: a multielectrode array implanted directly into the auditory nerve. We monitored the specificity of stimulation of the auditory pathway by recording extracellular unit activity at 32 sites along the tonotopic axis of the inferior colliculus. The results demonstrate the activation of specific auditory nerve populations throughout essentially the entire frequency range that is represented by characteristic frequencies in the inferior colliculus. Compared to conventional scala tympani stimulation, thresholds for neural excitation are as much as 50-fold lower and interference between electrodes stimulated simultaneously is markedly reduced. The results suggest that if an intraneural stimulating array were incorporated into an auditory prosthesis system for humans, it could offer substantial improvement in hearing replacement compared to contemporary cochlear implants.


Hearing Research | 1992

Chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation in neonatally deafened cats: Effects of intensity and stimulating electrode location

Patricia A. Leake; Russell L. Snyder; Gary T. Hradek; Stephen J. Rebscher

An earlier study conducted in this laboratory suggested that chronic intracochelear electrical stimulation at moderate current levels can at least partially delay or prevent the retrograde degeneration of primary auditory (spiral ganglion) neurons that otherwise is progressive after neonatal deafness induced by ototoxic drug administration. Increased survival of spiral ganglion neurons was observed within the basal cochlear region near the stimulating biopolar electrode pairs, while in more apical regions there was no significant difference between the stimulated and control cochleas. The mechanisms underlying this maintenance of spiral ganglion neurons induced by chronic electrical stimulation are uncertain, especially since increased neuronal survival was observed over broader sectors of the ganglion than would be expected to be directly activated by the bipolar electrodes and moderate stimulation intensity (6 dB above electrically evoked auditory brainstem response threshold) used. In this report, data are presented from a second series of neonatally deafened and chronically stimulated cats. The parameters for chronic electrical stimulation were manipulated in two simple ways. First, the intensity of the electrical stimulus was reduced from the earlier study, while the duration of chronic stimualtion periods was increased; and secondly, two different intracochlear positions of stimulating electrodes were employed in different experimental groups. Results indicate that elecrical stimulation of the cochlea at an extremely low intensity (2 dB above electrically evoked auditory brainstem response threshold) is sufficient to at least partially prevent or delay ganglion cell degeneration in the deafened cochlea. In addition, data suggest a differential distribution of the maintained or conserved ganglion cells, such that when the stimulating electrode pair was positioned near the base of the cochlea increased ganglion survival in a more basal cochlear sector, while stimulation at a more apical site resulted in increased neuronal survival extending to more apical regions.


Hearing Research | 1994

Changes in the cat cochlear nucleus following neonatal deafening and chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation

Lawrence R. Lustig; Patricia A. Leake; Russell L. Snyder; Stephen J. Rebscher

The effects of chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation on the cochlear nucleus (CN) were studied in eight cats that were neonatally deafened by daily intramuscular injections of neomycin. Profound hearing loss was confirmed in each animal by auditory brainstem response (ABR) and frequency following response (500 Hz) testing. Five of the kittens were implanted unilaterally with a scala tympani electrode array at ages 8-16 weeks. These kittens were stimulated daily for four hours at 2 dB above the evoked ABR threshold, over a period of three months, and subsequently euthanized for histological analysis at 26-32 weeks of age. The three remaining deaf kittens were maintained without stimulation over prolonged periods in order to study the long-term consequences of neonatal deafening, and were euthanized at 66-133 weeks of age. This study compares the CN of these deafened experimental animals and the CN of normal adult cats. Three experimental parameters were examined: CN volume, cross-sectional area of spherical cells in the rostral anteroventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN), and spherical cell density in this same region. The CN in animals that received electrical stimulation showed significant bilateral degenerative changes in all three measured parameters. Total nuclear volume was reduced by 35-36%, spherical cell size was reduced by 20-26%, and spherical cell density decreased by 36-42%, as compared to the normal cat CN. Comparisons were also made in the stimulated animals between CN ipsilateral to the stimulated cochlea and the contralateral, unstimulated CN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Hearing Research | 1991

Chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation in the neonatally deafened cat. II. Temporal properties of neurons in the inferior colliculus.

Russell L. Snyder; Stephen J. Rebscher; Patricia A. Leake; Kevin E. Kelly; Keli Cao

The major focus of this study was to define the effects of chronic intracochlear electrical stimulation (ICES) on single unit responses in the inferior colliculus from three experimental groups: 1) normal adults 2) neonatally-deafened/unstimulated adults; and 3) neonatally-deafened/chronically stimulated adults. The major findings include: 1) IC neurons in normal adults showed a diversity of perstimulus responses to ICES which were qualitatively similar to those evoked by acoustic stimuli. They responded with: an onset burst, a sustained discharge, a decrease in their spontaneous activity, or a strong post-stimulus response. The excitatory responses showed either a monotonic or a nonmonotonic increase in activity with increasing stimulus intensity. Response latencies ranged from 5 to over 40 ms. 2) Responses to ICES in normal and deafened/unstimulated animals were virtually indistinguishable from one another. 3) In contrast, responses to ICES in neonatally deafened stimulated animals were different from normal and from deafened, unstimulated animals. Their perstimulus response latencies were significantly shorter, their late response latencies were significantly longer, and the frequency of occurrence of inhibitory and late responses were significantly higher. From these results we conclude that the responses to intracochlear electrical stimulation are directly comparable to those observed following normal acoustic stimulation; that development of cochleotopic organization of the inferior colliculus is not affected by the almost complete lack of normal acoustic input experienced by neonatally deafened animals; and that the basic response properties of IC units are likewise unaffected by neonatal deafening. Moreover, the results suggest that, although the limited regime of electrical stimulation employed in these studies produced no major qualitative distortions in the perstimulus response patterns of IC neurons, it did result in some quantitative changes in those responses.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Selective Electrical Stimulation of the Auditory Nerve Activates a Pathway Specialized for High Temporal Acuity

John C. Middlebrooks; Russell L. Snyder

Deaf people who use cochlear implants show surprisingly poor sensitivity to the temporal fine structure of sounds. One possible reason is that conventional cochlear implants cannot activate selectively the auditory-nerve fibers having low characteristic frequencies (CFs), which, in normal hearing, phase lock to stimulus fine structure. Recently, we tested in animals an alternative mode of auditory prosthesis using penetrating auditory-nerve electrodes that permit frequency-specific excitation in all frequency regions. We present here measures of temporal transmission through the auditory brainstem, from pulse trains presented with various auditory-nerve electrodes to phase-locked activity of neurons in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC). On average, intraneural stimulation resulted in significant ICC phase locking at higher pulse rates (i.e., higher “limiting rates”) than did cochlear-implant stimulation. That could be attributed, however, to the larger percentage of low-CF neurons activated selectively by intraneural stimulation. Most ICC neurons with limiting rates >500 pulses per second had CFs <1.5 kHz, whereas neurons with lower limiting rates tended to have higher CFs. High limiting rates also correlated strongly with short first-spike latencies. It follows that short latencies correlated significantly with low CFs, opposite to the correlation observed with acoustical stimulation. These electrical-stimulation results reveal a high-temporal-acuity brainstem pathway characterized by low CFs, short latencies, and high-fidelity transmission of periodic stimulation. Frequency-specific stimulation of that pathway by intraneural stimulation might improve temporal acuity in human users of a future auditory prosthesis, which in turn might improve musical pitch perception and speech reception in noise.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2002

Postnatal refinement of auditory nerve projections to the cochlear nucleus in cats

Patricia A. Leake; Russell L. Snyder; Gary T. Hradek

Studies of visual system development have suggested that competition driven by activity is essential for refinement of initial topographically diffuse neuronal projections into their precise adult patterns. This has led to the assertion that this process may shape development of topographic connections throughout the nervous system. Because the cat auditory system is very immature at birth, with auditory nerve neurons initially exhibiting very low or no spontaneous activity, we hypothesized that the auditory nerve fibers might initially form topographically broad projections within the cochlear nuclei (CN), which later would become topographically precise at the time when adult‐like frequency selectivity develops. In this study, we made restricted injections of Neurobiotin, which labeled small sectors (300–500 μm) of the cochlear spiral ganglion, to study the projections of auditory nerve fibers representing a narrow band of frequencies. Results showed that projections from the basal cochlea to the CN are tonotopically organized in neonates, many days before the onset of functional hearing and even prior to the development of spontaneous activity in the auditory nerve. However, results also demonstrated that significant refinement of the topographic specificity of the primary afferent axons of the auditory nerve occurs in late gestation or early postnatal development. Projections to all three subdivisions of the CN exhibit clear tonotopic organization at or before birth, but the topographic restriction of fibers into frequency band laminae is significantly less precise in perinatal kittens than in adult cats. Two injections spaced ≥2 mm apart in the cochlea resulted in labeled bands of projecting axons in the anteroventral CN that were 53% broader than would be expected if they were proportional to those in adults, and the two projections were incompletely segregated in the youngest animals studied. Posteroventral CN (PVCN) projections (normalized for CN size) were 36% broader in neonates than in adults, and projections from double injections in the youngest subjects were nearly fused in the PVCN. Projections to the dorsal division of the CN were 32% broader in neonates than in adults when normalized, but the dorsal CN projections were always discrete, even at the earliest ages studied. J. Comp. Neurol. 448:6–27, 2002.

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Maike Vollmer

University of California

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Gary T. Hradek

University of California

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Ben H. Bonham

University of California

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