Degenerative Changes in the Organ of Corti and Lateral Cochlear Wall in Experimental Endolymphatic Hydrops and Human Meniere's Disease

Abstract
The pathogenesis of sensorineural hearing loss in Menière's disease and experimental endolymphatic hydrops is not fully understood. At the light microscopic level, there is poor correlation between the histopathology and loss of sensitivity and speech discrimination. The results of electron microscopic investigation of histopathology and alterations in immunoreactivity in the organ of Corti and lateral cochlear wall in the hydropic guinea pig are presented. Loss of outer and inner hair cells and spiral ganglion cells, particularly in the apical turn was evident by light microscopy. By electron microscopy, further evidence of degeneration was detected in the cuticular plate of outer hair cells, neural endings of both inner and outer hair cells, myelinated dendritic fibers, spiral ganglion cells, and types I and II fibrocytes of the lateral cochlear wall. There was a marked decrease in immunoreactivity for a variety of enzymes, calcium binding proteins, structural proteins, and integral membrane proteins of gap junctions, particularly among type I and type II fibrocytes of the lateral cochlear wall. The evidence suggests that dysfunction and degeneration of hair cells, afferent neurons and fibrocytes of the lateral cochlear wall are involved in the pathogenesis of hearing loss in endolymphatic hydrops.