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Original Article

Reversible And Irreversible Changes Of The Stria Vascularis: An Evaluation Of The Effects Of Ethacrynic Acid Separately And In Combination With Atoxyl

Pages 349-359 | Received 06 Jul 1977, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The morphological changes in the cochlea following administration of ethacrynic acid occur initially in the stria vascularis of the basal coils as an increased intracellular vesiculation of the marginal cells followed by inter- and intracellular oedema in the intermediate cell layer. The combined administration of ethacrynic acid and atoxyl (individual doses) can cause irreversible damage to the cochlear hair cells and the stria vascularis, while the administration of each of them separately in the same low dose did not cause hair cell degeneration or persistent morphological changes of the stria vascularis. An increased penetration of atoxyl into the cochlea is likely to occur due to the ethacrynic acid-induced change in the permeability of the endolymphatic partition so that the earlier known penetration of atoxyl into the cochlea is increased.

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