Oxidative Stress and Inflammation in Deafness: Current and Future Therapy
A special issue of Antioxidants (ISSN 2076-3921). This special issue belongs to the section "Health Outcomes of Antioxidants and Oxidative Stress".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2021) | Viewed by 21507
Special Issue Editors
Interests: mechanisms of noise induce hearing loss; aging; drug ototoxicity; auditory cortex dysfunction induced by exogenous insults; translational approaches therapy for sensory-neural hearing loss induced by exogenous factors
Interests: mitochondrial dynamics and mitophagy; mitochondrial DNA mutations and dysfunction; interralation of oxidative stress and inflammation in cochlear aging; antioxidant therapy
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We would like to invite you to contribute to a Special Issue of Antioxidants that we are planning as Guest Editors.
Hearing loss is the most common form of sensory impairment in humans. Although approximately 1 in 500 children are born with impaired hearing, sudden or progressive forms of hearing loss can manifest at any age. Hearing impairment following cochlear damage due to noise trauma, ototoxicity or age‐related cochlear degeneration has been linked to a common pathogenesis involving the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Identification of oxidative stress and improved knowledge of how cells die has been particularly significant for the development of novel therapeutic agents to reduce disability.
The main objective of this Special Issue is to improve knowledge of overall exogenous-factor--related degeneration of the auditory system, focusing particularly on the roles of oxidative stress, DNA damage and repair, and mitochondrial dysfunction in the pathophysiology of hearing.
In addition to oxidative stress, inflammatory responses in the cochlea following exposure to injury lead to the upregulation of pro-inflammatory mediators and rapid recruitment of inflammatory cells from the vascular system.
We are particularly interested in articles describing new insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the responses of sensory organs to aging. Special emphasis will be placed on findings that could lead to new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. We cordially invite researchers to contribute their original articles and reviews to our Special Issue.
Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:
- The model systems used to study hearing loss;
- Environmental and genetic factors contributing to hearing loss;
- The role of mitochondrial dysfunctions in the pathophysiology of hearing loss;
- Role of reactive oxygen species in cell death and senescence of sensory cells;
- MtDNA and nuclear DNA damage and DNA repair in sensory nervous cell degeneration;
- Cross-talk between oxidative stress and inflammation;
- Biomarkers of redox unbalance and inflammation;
- Pharmacological approaches such as antioxidant, mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming to restore hearing loss;
- Regenerative medicine for restoring the sensory inputs;
- Clinical applications.
Dr. Anna Rita Fetoni
Dr. Jing Wang
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Redox unbalance
- Molecular basis
- Cell death
- Hearing loss
- Therapies
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