Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.

Patients undergoing cochlear implantation could benefit from a simultaneous application of drugs into the ear, helping preserve residual low-frequency hearing and afferent nerve fiber populations. One way to apply drugs is to incorporate a cannula into the implant, through which drug solution is dri...

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Main Authors: Alec Salt, Jared Hartsock, Ruth Gill, Daniel Smyth, Jonathon Kirk, Kristien Verhoeven
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5560723?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e05b6500e805420b997a596941fa6c0f2020-11-24T21:30:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01128e018337410.1371/journal.pone.0183374Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.Alec SaltJared HartsockRuth GillDaniel SmythJonathon KirkKristien VerhoevenPatients undergoing cochlear implantation could benefit from a simultaneous application of drugs into the ear, helping preserve residual low-frequency hearing and afferent nerve fiber populations. One way to apply drugs is to incorporate a cannula into the implant, through which drug solution is driven. For such an approach, perilymph concentrations achieved and the distribution in the ear over time have not previously been documented. We used FITC-labeled dextran as a marker, delivering it into perilymph of guinea pigs at 10 or 100 nL/min though a cannula incorporated into a cochlear implant with the outlet in the mid basal turn. After injections of varying duration (2 hours, 1 day or 7 days) perilymph was collected from the cochlear apex using a sequential sampling technique, allowing dextran levels and gradients along scala tympani to be quantified. Data were interpreted quantitatively using computer simulations of the experiments. For injections of 2 hours duration, dextran levels were critically influenced by the presence or absence of fluid leakage at the cochleostomy site. When the cochleostomy was fluid-tight, substantially higher perilymph levels were achieved at the injection site, with concentration declining along scala tympani towards the apex. Contrary to expectations, large dextran gradients along scala tympani persisted after 24 hours of sustained injection and were still present in some animals after 7 days injection. Functional changes associated with implantation and dextran delivery, and the histological state of the implant and cannula were also documented. The persistent longitudinal gradients of dextan along the ear were not readily explained by computer simulations of the experiments based on prior pharmacokinetic data. One explanation is that inner ear pharmacokinetics are altered in the period after cochlear implantation, possibly by a permeabilization of the blood-labyrinth barrier as part of the immune response to the implant.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5560723?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alec Salt
Jared Hartsock
Ruth Gill
Daniel Smyth
Jonathon Kirk
Kristien Verhoeven
spellingShingle Alec Salt
Jared Hartsock
Ruth Gill
Daniel Smyth
Jonathon Kirk
Kristien Verhoeven
Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alec Salt
Jared Hartsock
Ruth Gill
Daniel Smyth
Jonathon Kirk
Kristien Verhoeven
author_sort Alec Salt
title Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
title_short Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
title_full Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
title_fullStr Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
title_full_unstemmed Perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
title_sort perilymph pharmacokinetics of marker applied through a cochlear implant in guinea pigs.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Patients undergoing cochlear implantation could benefit from a simultaneous application of drugs into the ear, helping preserve residual low-frequency hearing and afferent nerve fiber populations. One way to apply drugs is to incorporate a cannula into the implant, through which drug solution is driven. For such an approach, perilymph concentrations achieved and the distribution in the ear over time have not previously been documented. We used FITC-labeled dextran as a marker, delivering it into perilymph of guinea pigs at 10 or 100 nL/min though a cannula incorporated into a cochlear implant with the outlet in the mid basal turn. After injections of varying duration (2 hours, 1 day or 7 days) perilymph was collected from the cochlear apex using a sequential sampling technique, allowing dextran levels and gradients along scala tympani to be quantified. Data were interpreted quantitatively using computer simulations of the experiments. For injections of 2 hours duration, dextran levels were critically influenced by the presence or absence of fluid leakage at the cochleostomy site. When the cochleostomy was fluid-tight, substantially higher perilymph levels were achieved at the injection site, with concentration declining along scala tympani towards the apex. Contrary to expectations, large dextran gradients along scala tympani persisted after 24 hours of sustained injection and were still present in some animals after 7 days injection. Functional changes associated with implantation and dextran delivery, and the histological state of the implant and cannula were also documented. The persistent longitudinal gradients of dextan along the ear were not readily explained by computer simulations of the experiments based on prior pharmacokinetic data. One explanation is that inner ear pharmacokinetics are altered in the period after cochlear implantation, possibly by a permeabilization of the blood-labyrinth barrier as part of the immune response to the implant.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5560723?pdf=render
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