Abstract
The acute (30 min) effects of the loop diuretics piretanide, ethacrynic acid, bumetanide, furosemide, and azosemide, and the chronic (8 days) effects of furosemide and bumetanide on the zonulae occludentes (tight junctions) of the perilymph-endolymph barrier in the stria vascularis and in Reissner's membrane of the basal coch-lear turns were studied by freeze-fracture. Quantitative analysis of their effects indicated that the structural integrity of the barrier was modified by either an increase or a decrease in the number, depth, and density of the strands of the tight junctions of the strial marginal cells. Only azosemide appeared to modify the tight junctions between the epithelial cells of Reissner's membrane, but it had little effect on the strial junctions. The tight junctions between the basal cells of the stria appeared to be the least affected by the various loop diuretics, although piretanide appeared to increase randomly the intercellular spaces lying between the strands.