Literature DB >> 2065245

Absence of both auditory evoked potentials and auditory percepts dependent on timing cues.

A Starr1, D McPherson, J Patterson, M Don, W Luxford, R Shannon, Y Sininger, L Tonakawa, M Waring.   

Abstract

An 11-yr-old girl had an absence of sensory components of auditory evoked potentials (brainstem, middle and long-latency) to click and tone burst stimuli that she could clearly hear. Psychoacoustic tests revealed a marked impairment of those auditory perceptions dependent on temporal cues, that is, lateralization of binaural clicks, change of binaural masked threshold with changes in signal phase, binaural beats, detection of paired monaural clicks, monaural detection of a silent gap in a sound, and monaural threshold elevation for short duration tones. In contrast, auditory functions reflecting intensity or frequency discriminations (difference limens) were only minimally impaired. Pure tone audiometry showed a moderate (50 dB) bilateral hearing loss with a disproportionate severe loss of word intelligibility. Those auditory evoked potentials that were preserved included (1) cochlear microphonics reflecting hair cell activity; (2) cortical sustained potentials reflecting processing of slowly changing signals; and (3) long-latency cognitive components (P300, processing negativity) reflecting endogenous auditory cognitive processes. Both the evoked potential and perceptual deficits are attributed to changes in temporal encoding of acoustic signals perhaps occurring at the synapse between hair cell and eighth nerve dendrites. The results from this patient are discussed in relation to previously published cases with absent auditory evoked potentials and preserved hearing.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 2065245     DOI: 10.1093/brain/114.3.1157

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  31 in total

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3.  Temporal Response Properties of the Auditory Nerve in Implanted Children with Auditory Neuropathy Spectrum Disorder and Implanted Children with Sensorineural Hearing Loss.

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4.  Auditory System Development and Dysfunction: What Do We Really Know about Childhood Hearing Loss?

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5.  Auditory pathway changes mirror overall disease progress in individuals with Friedreich ataxia.

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7.  Central recruitment in individual with auditory neuropathy.

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Review 8.  Cellular Computations Underlying Detection of Gaps in Sounds and Lateralizing Sound Sources.

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Journal:  Trends Neurosci       Date:  2017-08-31       Impact factor: 13.837

9.  Inter-trial coherence as a marker of cortical phase synchrony in children with sensorineural hearing loss and auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder fitted with hearing aids and cochlear implants.

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Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-12-01       Impact factor: 3.708

10.  Cortical evoked potentials to an auditory illusion: binaural beats.

Authors:  Hillel Pratt; Arnold Starr; Henry J Michalewski; Andrew Dimitrijevic; Naomi Bleich; Nomi Mittelman
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-07-18       Impact factor: 3.708

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