Abstract
Abstract
Background
Auditory electrophysiological tests of the cortex, which are processed in or close to the auditory cortex, are brain reactions to sound. A variation in a continuous stimulus causes the acoustic change complex potential (ACC), which is a wave following the P1-N1-P2 response.
Objective
To measure the amplitude and latency of different components of ACC in normal subjects and across individuals with mild and moderate degrees of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).
Patients and methods
The study includes 100 individuals with the age ranged from 10 to 50 years with different degrees of SNHL. The ACC was evoked by a change of second formant in the middle of ongoing steady-state synthetic, 3 formant vowels (ooee). The total duration was 500 ms. Changing occurred at 250 ms.
Results
The SNHL subgroups showed statistically significantly longer P1 and N1 latencies. N1 and P2 amplitudes of ACC onset response were larger with a statistical significance as compared to controls. Post hoc analysis revealed no statistically significant difference between mild and moderate SNHL on ACC parameters. Age showed a significant negative correlation with ACC N1 and P2 latency, ACC P1 and N1 amplitude, and onset P2 latency. Onset response P1 latency was significantly higher in children than adults. Median ACC P1 amplitude significantly increased in children than adults.
Conclusion
ACC is a reliable tool for testing the auditory cortex function of detecting difference in sounds presented that can be recorded readily in patients with mild and moderate SNHL.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference27 articles.
1. Chen KH, Small SA (2015) Elicitation of the acoustic change complex to long-duration speech stimuli in four-month-old infants. Int. J, Otolaryngol, p 562030
2. Kim J (2015) Acoustic change complex: clinical implications. J. Audio. Otol 19(3):120–124
3. Dimitrijevic A, Starr A, Bhatt S et al (2011) Auditory cortical N100 in pre- and post-synaptic auditory neuropathy to frequency or intensity changes of continuous tones. Clin. Neurophysiol 122(3):594–604
4. Michalewski HJ, Starr A, Nguyen TT, Kong YY, Zeng FG (2005) Auditory temporal processes in normal-hearing individuals and in patients with auditory neuropathy. Clin. Neurophysiol 116(3):669–80
5. Martinez AS, Eisenberg LS, Boothroyd A (2013) The acoustic change complex in young children with hearing loss: a preliminary study. Semin. Hear 34(4):278–87
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献