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The Vestibular-Auditory Interaction for Auditory Brainstem Response to Low Frequencies
Author(s) -
Seyede Faranak Emami,
Nasrin Gohari
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
isrn otolaryngology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5750
pISSN - 2090-5742
DOI - 10.1155/2014/103598
Subject(s) - auditory brainstem response , audiology , brainstem , auditory pathways , vestibular system , auditory masking , psychology , acoustics , medicine , neuroscience , hearing loss , physics , octave (electronics)
Since saccular projection is sound sensitive, the objective is to investigate the possibility that the saccular projections may contribute to auditory brainstem response to 500 HZ tone burst (ABR 500 HZ ). During the case-control research, twenty healthy controls compared to forty selected case groups as having chronic and resistant BPPV were evaluated in the audiology department of Hamadan University of Medical Sciences (Hamadan, Iran). Assessment is comprised of audiologic examinations, cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (cVEMPs), and ABR 500 HZ . We found that forty affected ears of BPPV patients with decreased vestibular excitability as detected by abnormal cVEMPs had abnormal results in ABR 500 HZ , whereas unaffected ears presented normal findings. Multiple comparisons of mean p13, n23 latencies, and peak-to-peak amplitudes between three groups (affected, unaffected, and healthy ears) were significant. In conclusion, the saccular nerves can be projective to auditory bundles and interact with auditory brainstem response to low frequencies. Combine the cVEMPs and ABR 500 HZ in battery approach tests of vestibular assessment and produce valuable data for judgment on the site of lesion. Regarding vestibular cooperation for making of wave V, it is reasonable that the term of ABR 500 HZ is not adequate and the new term or vestibular-auditory brainstem response to 500 HZ tone burst is more suitable.

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