Found this quote from the late Al Margolis, who was either an EE or a physicist and who was in any case brilliant, on the "cables" forum in 2009:
"Characteristic impedance, being part of what are called "transmission line effects," is (at least for typical interconnect lengths) generally considered to be utterly inapplicable to audio frequencies. Note that I limited the statements in my first post above to cables carrying analog audio, not digital signals, video, or rf."
And found this quote from Atmasphere (Ralph), posted in 2008 on the Cables forum. Here he is speaking of speaker cables, but it's the same parameter, characteristic impedance shortened to "impedance" when speaking of ICs that are 50, 75, or 110 ohms in their characteristic impedance. I put his significant words in bold italics:
"The second thing to understand is that all speaker cables have a property known as ’Characteristic Impedance’. This is not the resistance or impedance of the cable, rather it is the property of the cable such that it will have its best performance when terminated by a specific impedance. For example, a cable with a characteristic impedance of 8 ohms will perform best when terminated by an 8 ohm load. Its actual DC resistance will likely be quite low as will its AC impedance, however.
Case closed, so far as I am concerned. You need not be concerned about cable (characteristic) impedance. I did not steer you wrong.