From auditory cortex to cochlea: Progress in the auditory efferent system

Main Article Content

Gonzalo Terreros H.
Bárbara Wipe U.
Alex León I.
Paul H. Délano R.

Keywords

Olivocochlear, auditory efferent, descending projections, auditory cortex, cochlea, neurotransmitters

Abstract

The auditory efferent system is composed by the olivocochlear fibers and descending projections that originate in the auditory cortex and end in the cochlea. The olivocochlear system is divided into a medial and lateral division, with fibers directed to the outer hair cells and to the auditory nerve fibers respectively. It is known that acetylcholine is the main neu- rotransmitter of the olivocochlear synapses and that outer hair cells and auditory nerve fibers have receptors to this molecule. The cortico-cochlear efferent system originates in layers V and VI of the auditory cortex. These descending projections are directed to the inferior colliculus and superior olivary complex, a site in which the olivocochlear fibers emerge and connect the brain with the cochlear receptor. In this article recent discoveries obtained in the last years are reviewed: (i) new neurotransmitters and receptors of the olivocochlear system; (ii) anatomy and physiology of descending pathways from the auditory cortex to the cochlea and, (iii) clinical role of auditory efferents in audiological and neuropsychiatric pathologies.

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