Advances in Noise Research, Volume 1
Biological Effects of Noise
Herausgeber: Prasher, Deepak; Luxon, Linda M
Advances in Noise Research, Volume 1
Biological Effects of Noise
Herausgeber: Prasher, Deepak; Luxon, Linda M
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The series entitled Advances in Noise Research has developed from the European Commission Concerted Action Programme on Protection Against Noise (PAN) The first volume in the series is devoted to the biological effects of noise and covers six main topics: physiological mechanisms, diagnosis, otoacoustic emissions, tinnitus, pharmacology and non-auditory effects in relation to noise.
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The series entitled Advances in Noise Research has developed from the European Commission Concerted Action Programme on Protection Against Noise (PAN) The first volume in the series is devoted to the biological effects of noise and covers six main topics: physiological mechanisms, diagnosis, otoacoustic emissions, tinnitus, pharmacology and non-auditory effects in relation to noise.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Wiley
- Seitenzahl: 378
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Januar 2006
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 733g
- ISBN-13: 9781861560759
- ISBN-10: 1861560753
- Artikelnr.: 22157527
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Wiley
- Seitenzahl: 378
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Januar 2006
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 733g
- ISBN-13: 9781861560759
- ISBN-10: 1861560753
- Artikelnr.: 22157527
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Deepak Prasher, Institute of Laryngology and Otology, University College London, UK. Linda Luxon, Great Ormond St Hospital, UK.
Acknowelegements.
Contributors.
Foreword.
Introduction.
PART 1: PHYSIOLOGY.
Chapter 1. Noice-induced hearing loss: current physiological investigations
(Jean-Luc Puel and Remy Pujol).
Chapter 2. Spiral ganglion cell loss and survival after total hair cell
destruction in the guinea-pig cochlea (Hilary C. Dodson).
Chapter 3. Evidence for functional reorganization in the central auditory
system after acoustic overstimulation (Richard J. Salvi, Jian Wang and Chun
Xiao Qiu).
Chapter 4. Modulating auditory sensitivity to noise trauma by sound
conditioning (Barbara Canlon, Anette Fransson and Safak Dagli).
Chapter 5. The role of the acoustic reflex in the development of resistance
to noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) in humans (Vittorio Colletti and
Francesco Fiorino).
Chapter 6. Pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss: is the relationship
between pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss due to an ototoxic
pheomelanin interaction or to otoprotective eumelanin effects?
(Marie-Louise Barrenas).
Chapter 7. Audiometric and electrophysiological changes caused by drilling
of the skull base (Vittorio Colletti, Francesco G. Fiorino, Nadia Giarbini
and Zeno Policante).
PART 2: DIAGNOSIS OF NOISE-INDUCED HEARING LOSS.
Chapter 8. The clinical diagnosis of noise-induced hearing loss (Linda M.
Luxon).
Chapter 9. Contralateral suppression of ABR and DPOAE and susceptibility to
noise-induced hearing loss (Mariola Sliwinska-Kowalska, Wieslaw Sulkowski,
Piotr Kotylo, Malgorzata Pawlaczyk-Luszcynska).
Chapter 10. How should different susceptibility factors be evaluated?
(Jukka Starck).
Chapter 11. Factors influencing susceptibility to noise-induced hearing
loss (Deepak Prasher).
Chapter 12. Is genetic hearing loss interactive with noise-induced hearing
loss? (Risto Kaksonen, Ilmari Pyykko, Ulf Rosenhall, Jukka Stark, Esjo
Toppila, Sand Kila and Juha Kere).
Chapter 13. The specific problems of noise in military life (Armand Dancer,
Karl Buck, Georges Parmentier and Pascal Hamery).
Chapter 14. Ageing as a major confounding factor in noise-induced hearing
loss (Ilmari Pyykko, Jukka Starck, Esko Toppila and Risto Kaksonen).
Chapter 15. Presbyacusis related to exposure to occupational noise and
other ototraumatic factors(Ulf Rosenhall.
Chapter 16. A source of audiometric notches at 6 kHz (Mark E. Lutman and
Hussein YN Qasem).
PART 3: OTOACOUSTIC EMISSIONS.
Chapter 17. Noise-induced cochlear changes reflected in otocoustic
emissions (J. Attias, I. Bresloff, V. Furman and I. Reshef).
Chapter 18. Spontaneous otoacoustic emission modelling and noise effect on
its spectral estimation (Jun Cheng.
Chapter 19. Typical findings of distortion-product otoacoustic emissions
(DPOAE) in occupational noise-induced hearing loss (Jens Oeken).
Chapter 20. Measurements of distortion-product otoacoustic emisisons in
industrial workers wiht noise-induced hearing loss (Sylwia Kowalska and
Wieslaw Sulkowski.
PART 4: TINNITUS.
Chapter 21. Tinnitus following noise exposure: a review (Borska Josifovic
Ceranic, Deepak K. Prasher and Linda M Luxon).
Chapter 22. Neurophysoiology in tinnitus (Joseph Attias and Ian Bresloff).
Chapter 23. Psychological complaint in patients suffering from chronic
tinnitus (F Zenker and JJ Barajas).
PART 5: PHARMACOLOGY.
Chapter 24. The role of free radical scavengers in the prevention of
noise-induced hearing loss (D Hnderson, BH Hu, XY Zheng and SL McFadden).
Chapter 25. Protective effect of the glutamate antagonist kynurenate on
noise-induced hearing loss (Jean-Luc Puel, Christine C d'Aldin, Jerome Ruel
and R Pujol).
Chapter 26 Prophylactic effect of magnesium in noise-induced hearing loss
(Joseph Attias, Ian Bresloff, Zvi Joachims and Hartmut Ising).
Chapter 27. Hearing loss after exposure to styren and noise: a pilot study
(Ann-Christin Johnson, Ing-Marie Andersson, Tomas Lindh, Per R Nylen and
Eva B Svensson, Bjorn Hagerman, Thais C Morata).
Chapter 28. A review of the synergistic damage to hearing due to combined
exposure to industrial noise and otoneurotoxic materials (Avi Frenkel).
PART 6: NON-AUDITORY EFFECTS.
Chapter 29. Noise-induced stress effects and accelerated ageing: its
relevance for work noise-related risk increase in myocardial infarction (H
Ising, W Babisch, B Kruppa and T Gunther).
Chapter 30. Epidemiological studies on cardiovascular effects of traffic
noise (W Babisch).
Chapter 31. Context and coping as moderators of potential health effects in
noise-exposed persons (P Lercher).
Chapter 32. Noise-induced sleep disturbance, stress reactions and health
effects (C Maschke).
Index.
Contributors.
Foreword.
Introduction.
PART 1: PHYSIOLOGY.
Chapter 1. Noice-induced hearing loss: current physiological investigations
(Jean-Luc Puel and Remy Pujol).
Chapter 2. Spiral ganglion cell loss and survival after total hair cell
destruction in the guinea-pig cochlea (Hilary C. Dodson).
Chapter 3. Evidence for functional reorganization in the central auditory
system after acoustic overstimulation (Richard J. Salvi, Jian Wang and Chun
Xiao Qiu).
Chapter 4. Modulating auditory sensitivity to noise trauma by sound
conditioning (Barbara Canlon, Anette Fransson and Safak Dagli).
Chapter 5. The role of the acoustic reflex in the development of resistance
to noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) in humans (Vittorio Colletti and
Francesco Fiorino).
Chapter 6. Pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss: is the relationship
between pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss due to an ototoxic
pheomelanin interaction or to otoprotective eumelanin effects?
(Marie-Louise Barrenas).
Chapter 7. Audiometric and electrophysiological changes caused by drilling
of the skull base (Vittorio Colletti, Francesco G. Fiorino, Nadia Giarbini
and Zeno Policante).
PART 2: DIAGNOSIS OF NOISE-INDUCED HEARING LOSS.
Chapter 8. The clinical diagnosis of noise-induced hearing loss (Linda M.
Luxon).
Chapter 9. Contralateral suppression of ABR and DPOAE and susceptibility to
noise-induced hearing loss (Mariola Sliwinska-Kowalska, Wieslaw Sulkowski,
Piotr Kotylo, Malgorzata Pawlaczyk-Luszcynska).
Chapter 10. How should different susceptibility factors be evaluated?
(Jukka Starck).
Chapter 11. Factors influencing susceptibility to noise-induced hearing
loss (Deepak Prasher).
Chapter 12. Is genetic hearing loss interactive with noise-induced hearing
loss? (Risto Kaksonen, Ilmari Pyykko, Ulf Rosenhall, Jukka Stark, Esjo
Toppila, Sand Kila and Juha Kere).
Chapter 13. The specific problems of noise in military life (Armand Dancer,
Karl Buck, Georges Parmentier and Pascal Hamery).
Chapter 14. Ageing as a major confounding factor in noise-induced hearing
loss (Ilmari Pyykko, Jukka Starck, Esko Toppila and Risto Kaksonen).
Chapter 15. Presbyacusis related to exposure to occupational noise and
other ototraumatic factors(Ulf Rosenhall.
Chapter 16. A source of audiometric notches at 6 kHz (Mark E. Lutman and
Hussein YN Qasem).
PART 3: OTOACOUSTIC EMISSIONS.
Chapter 17. Noise-induced cochlear changes reflected in otocoustic
emissions (J. Attias, I. Bresloff, V. Furman and I. Reshef).
Chapter 18. Spontaneous otoacoustic emission modelling and noise effect on
its spectral estimation (Jun Cheng.
Chapter 19. Typical findings of distortion-product otoacoustic emissions
(DPOAE) in occupational noise-induced hearing loss (Jens Oeken).
Chapter 20. Measurements of distortion-product otoacoustic emisisons in
industrial workers wiht noise-induced hearing loss (Sylwia Kowalska and
Wieslaw Sulkowski.
PART 4: TINNITUS.
Chapter 21. Tinnitus following noise exposure: a review (Borska Josifovic
Ceranic, Deepak K. Prasher and Linda M Luxon).
Chapter 22. Neurophysoiology in tinnitus (Joseph Attias and Ian Bresloff).
Chapter 23. Psychological complaint in patients suffering from chronic
tinnitus (F Zenker and JJ Barajas).
PART 5: PHARMACOLOGY.
Chapter 24. The role of free radical scavengers in the prevention of
noise-induced hearing loss (D Hnderson, BH Hu, XY Zheng and SL McFadden).
Chapter 25. Protective effect of the glutamate antagonist kynurenate on
noise-induced hearing loss (Jean-Luc Puel, Christine C d'Aldin, Jerome Ruel
and R Pujol).
Chapter 26 Prophylactic effect of magnesium in noise-induced hearing loss
(Joseph Attias, Ian Bresloff, Zvi Joachims and Hartmut Ising).
Chapter 27. Hearing loss after exposure to styren and noise: a pilot study
(Ann-Christin Johnson, Ing-Marie Andersson, Tomas Lindh, Per R Nylen and
Eva B Svensson, Bjorn Hagerman, Thais C Morata).
Chapter 28. A review of the synergistic damage to hearing due to combined
exposure to industrial noise and otoneurotoxic materials (Avi Frenkel).
PART 6: NON-AUDITORY EFFECTS.
Chapter 29. Noise-induced stress effects and accelerated ageing: its
relevance for work noise-related risk increase in myocardial infarction (H
Ising, W Babisch, B Kruppa and T Gunther).
Chapter 30. Epidemiological studies on cardiovascular effects of traffic
noise (W Babisch).
Chapter 31. Context and coping as moderators of potential health effects in
noise-exposed persons (P Lercher).
Chapter 32. Noise-induced sleep disturbance, stress reactions and health
effects (C Maschke).
Index.
Acknowelegements.
Contributors.
Foreword.
Introduction.
PART 1: PHYSIOLOGY.
Chapter 1. Noice-induced hearing loss: current physiological investigations
(Jean-Luc Puel and Remy Pujol).
Chapter 2. Spiral ganglion cell loss and survival after total hair cell
destruction in the guinea-pig cochlea (Hilary C. Dodson).
Chapter 3. Evidence for functional reorganization in the central auditory
system after acoustic overstimulation (Richard J. Salvi, Jian Wang and Chun
Xiao Qiu).
Chapter 4. Modulating auditory sensitivity to noise trauma by sound
conditioning (Barbara Canlon, Anette Fransson and Safak Dagli).
Chapter 5. The role of the acoustic reflex in the development of resistance
to noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) in humans (Vittorio Colletti and
Francesco Fiorino).
Chapter 6. Pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss: is the relationship
between pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss due to an ototoxic
pheomelanin interaction or to otoprotective eumelanin effects?
(Marie-Louise Barrenas).
Chapter 7. Audiometric and electrophysiological changes caused by drilling
of the skull base (Vittorio Colletti, Francesco G. Fiorino, Nadia Giarbini
and Zeno Policante).
PART 2: DIAGNOSIS OF NOISE-INDUCED HEARING LOSS.
Chapter 8. The clinical diagnosis of noise-induced hearing loss (Linda M.
Luxon).
Chapter 9. Contralateral suppression of ABR and DPOAE and susceptibility to
noise-induced hearing loss (Mariola Sliwinska-Kowalska, Wieslaw Sulkowski,
Piotr Kotylo, Malgorzata Pawlaczyk-Luszcynska).
Chapter 10. How should different susceptibility factors be evaluated?
(Jukka Starck).
Chapter 11. Factors influencing susceptibility to noise-induced hearing
loss (Deepak Prasher).
Chapter 12. Is genetic hearing loss interactive with noise-induced hearing
loss? (Risto Kaksonen, Ilmari Pyykko, Ulf Rosenhall, Jukka Stark, Esjo
Toppila, Sand Kila and Juha Kere).
Chapter 13. The specific problems of noise in military life (Armand Dancer,
Karl Buck, Georges Parmentier and Pascal Hamery).
Chapter 14. Ageing as a major confounding factor in noise-induced hearing
loss (Ilmari Pyykko, Jukka Starck, Esko Toppila and Risto Kaksonen).
Chapter 15. Presbyacusis related to exposure to occupational noise and
other ototraumatic factors(Ulf Rosenhall.
Chapter 16. A source of audiometric notches at 6 kHz (Mark E. Lutman and
Hussein YN Qasem).
PART 3: OTOACOUSTIC EMISSIONS.
Chapter 17. Noise-induced cochlear changes reflected in otocoustic
emissions (J. Attias, I. Bresloff, V. Furman and I. Reshef).
Chapter 18. Spontaneous otoacoustic emission modelling and noise effect on
its spectral estimation (Jun Cheng.
Chapter 19. Typical findings of distortion-product otoacoustic emissions
(DPOAE) in occupational noise-induced hearing loss (Jens Oeken).
Chapter 20. Measurements of distortion-product otoacoustic emisisons in
industrial workers wiht noise-induced hearing loss (Sylwia Kowalska and
Wieslaw Sulkowski.
PART 4: TINNITUS.
Chapter 21. Tinnitus following noise exposure: a review (Borska Josifovic
Ceranic, Deepak K. Prasher and Linda M Luxon).
Chapter 22. Neurophysoiology in tinnitus (Joseph Attias and Ian Bresloff).
Chapter 23. Psychological complaint in patients suffering from chronic
tinnitus (F Zenker and JJ Barajas).
PART 5: PHARMACOLOGY.
Chapter 24. The role of free radical scavengers in the prevention of
noise-induced hearing loss (D Hnderson, BH Hu, XY Zheng and SL McFadden).
Chapter 25. Protective effect of the glutamate antagonist kynurenate on
noise-induced hearing loss (Jean-Luc Puel, Christine C d'Aldin, Jerome Ruel
and R Pujol).
Chapter 26 Prophylactic effect of magnesium in noise-induced hearing loss
(Joseph Attias, Ian Bresloff, Zvi Joachims and Hartmut Ising).
Chapter 27. Hearing loss after exposure to styren and noise: a pilot study
(Ann-Christin Johnson, Ing-Marie Andersson, Tomas Lindh, Per R Nylen and
Eva B Svensson, Bjorn Hagerman, Thais C Morata).
Chapter 28. A review of the synergistic damage to hearing due to combined
exposure to industrial noise and otoneurotoxic materials (Avi Frenkel).
PART 6: NON-AUDITORY EFFECTS.
Chapter 29. Noise-induced stress effects and accelerated ageing: its
relevance for work noise-related risk increase in myocardial infarction (H
Ising, W Babisch, B Kruppa and T Gunther).
Chapter 30. Epidemiological studies on cardiovascular effects of traffic
noise (W Babisch).
Chapter 31. Context and coping as moderators of potential health effects in
noise-exposed persons (P Lercher).
Chapter 32. Noise-induced sleep disturbance, stress reactions and health
effects (C Maschke).
Index.
Contributors.
Foreword.
Introduction.
PART 1: PHYSIOLOGY.
Chapter 1. Noice-induced hearing loss: current physiological investigations
(Jean-Luc Puel and Remy Pujol).
Chapter 2. Spiral ganglion cell loss and survival after total hair cell
destruction in the guinea-pig cochlea (Hilary C. Dodson).
Chapter 3. Evidence for functional reorganization in the central auditory
system after acoustic overstimulation (Richard J. Salvi, Jian Wang and Chun
Xiao Qiu).
Chapter 4. Modulating auditory sensitivity to noise trauma by sound
conditioning (Barbara Canlon, Anette Fransson and Safak Dagli).
Chapter 5. The role of the acoustic reflex in the development of resistance
to noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) in humans (Vittorio Colletti and
Francesco Fiorino).
Chapter 6. Pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss: is the relationship
between pigmentation and noise-induced hearing loss due to an ototoxic
pheomelanin interaction or to otoprotective eumelanin effects?
(Marie-Louise Barrenas).
Chapter 7. Audiometric and electrophysiological changes caused by drilling
of the skull base (Vittorio Colletti, Francesco G. Fiorino, Nadia Giarbini
and Zeno Policante).
PART 2: DIAGNOSIS OF NOISE-INDUCED HEARING LOSS.
Chapter 8. The clinical diagnosis of noise-induced hearing loss (Linda M.
Luxon).
Chapter 9. Contralateral suppression of ABR and DPOAE and susceptibility to
noise-induced hearing loss (Mariola Sliwinska-Kowalska, Wieslaw Sulkowski,
Piotr Kotylo, Malgorzata Pawlaczyk-Luszcynska).
Chapter 10. How should different susceptibility factors be evaluated?
(Jukka Starck).
Chapter 11. Factors influencing susceptibility to noise-induced hearing
loss (Deepak Prasher).
Chapter 12. Is genetic hearing loss interactive with noise-induced hearing
loss? (Risto Kaksonen, Ilmari Pyykko, Ulf Rosenhall, Jukka Stark, Esjo
Toppila, Sand Kila and Juha Kere).
Chapter 13. The specific problems of noise in military life (Armand Dancer,
Karl Buck, Georges Parmentier and Pascal Hamery).
Chapter 14. Ageing as a major confounding factor in noise-induced hearing
loss (Ilmari Pyykko, Jukka Starck, Esko Toppila and Risto Kaksonen).
Chapter 15. Presbyacusis related to exposure to occupational noise and
other ototraumatic factors(Ulf Rosenhall.
Chapter 16. A source of audiometric notches at 6 kHz (Mark E. Lutman and
Hussein YN Qasem).
PART 3: OTOACOUSTIC EMISSIONS.
Chapter 17. Noise-induced cochlear changes reflected in otocoustic
emissions (J. Attias, I. Bresloff, V. Furman and I. Reshef).
Chapter 18. Spontaneous otoacoustic emission modelling and noise effect on
its spectral estimation (Jun Cheng.
Chapter 19. Typical findings of distortion-product otoacoustic emissions
(DPOAE) in occupational noise-induced hearing loss (Jens Oeken).
Chapter 20. Measurements of distortion-product otoacoustic emisisons in
industrial workers wiht noise-induced hearing loss (Sylwia Kowalska and
Wieslaw Sulkowski.
PART 4: TINNITUS.
Chapter 21. Tinnitus following noise exposure: a review (Borska Josifovic
Ceranic, Deepak K. Prasher and Linda M Luxon).
Chapter 22. Neurophysoiology in tinnitus (Joseph Attias and Ian Bresloff).
Chapter 23. Psychological complaint in patients suffering from chronic
tinnitus (F Zenker and JJ Barajas).
PART 5: PHARMACOLOGY.
Chapter 24. The role of free radical scavengers in the prevention of
noise-induced hearing loss (D Hnderson, BH Hu, XY Zheng and SL McFadden).
Chapter 25. Protective effect of the glutamate antagonist kynurenate on
noise-induced hearing loss (Jean-Luc Puel, Christine C d'Aldin, Jerome Ruel
and R Pujol).
Chapter 26 Prophylactic effect of magnesium in noise-induced hearing loss
(Joseph Attias, Ian Bresloff, Zvi Joachims and Hartmut Ising).
Chapter 27. Hearing loss after exposure to styren and noise: a pilot study
(Ann-Christin Johnson, Ing-Marie Andersson, Tomas Lindh, Per R Nylen and
Eva B Svensson, Bjorn Hagerman, Thais C Morata).
Chapter 28. A review of the synergistic damage to hearing due to combined
exposure to industrial noise and otoneurotoxic materials (Avi Frenkel).
PART 6: NON-AUDITORY EFFECTS.
Chapter 29. Noise-induced stress effects and accelerated ageing: its
relevance for work noise-related risk increase in myocardial infarction (H
Ising, W Babisch, B Kruppa and T Gunther).
Chapter 30. Epidemiological studies on cardiovascular effects of traffic
noise (W Babisch).
Chapter 31. Context and coping as moderators of potential health effects in
noise-exposed persons (P Lercher).
Chapter 32. Noise-induced sleep disturbance, stress reactions and health
effects (C Maschke).
Index.