Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a cardiac hormone known to mediate increased capillary permeability, vasodilation, and natriuresis. Since specific receptors for ANP exist in both the eye and brain, possibly playing a role in ocular and cerebrospinal fluid regulation, we postulated that ANP might also be involved in inner ear fluid dynamics. Autoradiography was used to evaluate whether and where ANP receptors are present in the inner ear. Frozen sections of the cochlea and vestibular organ from guinea pigs (n = 18) were incubated in either 125J-ANP alone or together with an excess of unlabeled ANP (as control). ANP receptors were demonstrated in the stria vascularis of the cochlea and in the secretory epithelium of the ampulla and the utriculus, but not in the region of the sensory cells. These results indicate that (1) specific ANP receptors are present in the inner ear, and (2) their local distribution is congruent with those parts thought to regulate labyrinthine fluid composition and volume. We speculate that ANP contributes to the homeostasis of the inner ear fluids and may even play a role in the pathophysiology of Menière's disease.
Ca++ concentrations and d.c. potential within the endolymphatic space of the cochlear duct and the semicircular canal following acute anoxia or ethacrynic acid intoxication (100 mg/kg i.v.) were measured by means of double-barrelled microelectrodes. Ionic calcium content and d.c. potential were found to change in a roughly biphasic fashion after either intervention. The maximal increase in Ca++ concentration coincided with the decline in the d.c. potential, which after a rapid decline finally reached and maintained negative voltages. This phenomenon was more pronounced in the cochlear part than in the semicircular canal. A model of calcium homeostasis is proposed in an attempt to reconcile the data presented with earlier evidence.
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