Sadreev, Ildar I. and Burwood, George W. S. and Flaherty, Samuel M. and Kim, Jongrae and Russell, Ian J. and Abdullin, Timur I. and Lukashkin, Andrei N. (2019) Drug Diffusion Along an Intact Mammalian Cochlea. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 13. ISSN 1662-5102

Sadreev, Ildar I. and Burwood, George W. S. and Flaherty, Samuel M. and Kim, Jongrae and Russell, Ian and Abdullin, Timur I. and Lukashkin, Andrei (2021) Sadreev, Ildar I. and Burwood, George W. S. and Flaherty, Samuel M. and Kim, Jongrae and Russell, Ian J. and Abdullin, Timur I. and Lukashkin, Andrei N. (2019) Drug Diffusion Along an Intact Mammalian Cochlea. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 13. ISSN 1662-5102. [Data Collection]

Project Description

Intratympanic drug administration depends on the ability of drugs to pass through the round window membrane (RW) at the base of the cochlea and diffuse from this location to the apex. While the RW permeability for many different drugs can be promoted, passive diffusion along the narrowing spiral of the cochlea is limited. Earlier measurements of the distribution of marker ions, corticosteroids and antibiotics demonstrated that the concentration of substances applied to the RW was two to three orders of magnitude higher in the base compared to the apex. The measurements, however, involved perforating the cochlear bony wall and, in some cases, sampling perilymph. These manipulations can change the flow rate of perilymph and lead to intake of perilymph through the cochlear aqueduct, thereby disguising concentration gradients of the delivered substances. In this study, the suppressive effect of salicylate on cochlear amplification via block of the outer hair cell (OHC) somatic motility was utilized to assess salicylate diffusion along an intact guinea pig cochlea in vivo. Salicylate solution was applied to the RW and threshold elevation of auditory nerve responses was measured at different times and frequencies after application. Resultant concentrations of salicylate along the cochlea were calculated by fitting the experimental data using a mathematical model of the diffusion and clearing of salicylate in a tube of variable diameter combined with a model describing salicylate action on cochlear amplification. Concentrations reach a steady-state at different times for different cochlear locations and it takes longer to reach the steady-state at more apical locations. Even at the steady state, the predicted concentration at the apex is negligible. Model predictions for the geometry of the longer human cochlea show even higher differences in the steady-state concentrations of the drugs between cochlear base and apex. Our findings confirm conclusions that achieving therapeutic drug concentrations throughout the entire cochlear duct is hardly possible when the drugs are applied to the RW and are distributed via passive diffusion. Assisted methods of drug delivery are needed to reach a more uniform distribution of drugs along the cochlea.

Uncontrolled Keywords: cochlea, drug delivery, salicylate, cochlear amplifier, cochlear round window
Subjects: B Subjects allied to medicine > B120 Physiology
B Subjects allied to medicine > B140 Neuroscience
B Subjects allied to medicine > B610 Audiology
C Biological sciences > C910 Applied biological sciences
Departments: School of Applied Sciences
Depositing User: Andrei Lukashkin
Date Deposited: 09 Mar 2021 10:01
Last Modified: 23 Jun 2021 11:39
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