| Literature DB >> 23093964 |
Curtis J Billings1, Melissa A Papesh, Tina M Penman, Lucas S Baltzell, Frederick J Gallun.
Abstract
The clinical usefulness of aided cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) remains unclear despite several decades of research. One major contributor to this ambiguity is the wide range of variability across published studies and across individuals within a given study; some results demonstrate expected amplification effects, while others demonstrate limited or no amplification effects. Recent evidence indicates that some of the variability in amplification effects may be explained by distinguishing between experiments that focused on physiological detection of a stimulus versus those that differentiate responses to two audible signals, or physiological discrimination. Herein, we ask if either of these approaches is clinically feasible given the inherent challenges with aided CAEPs. N1 and P2 waves were elicited from 12 noise-masked normal-hearing individuals using hearing-aid-processed 1000-Hz pure tones. Stimulus levels were varied to study the effect of hearing-aid-signal/hearing-aid-noise audibility relative to the noise-masked thresholds. Results demonstrate that clinical use of aided CAEPs may be justified when determining whether audible stimuli are physiologically detectable relative to inaudible signals. However, differentiating aided CAEPs elicited from two suprathreshold stimuli (i.e., physiological discrimination) is problematic and should not be used for clinical decision making until a better understanding of the interaction between hearing-aid-processed stimuli and CAEPs can be established.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23093964 PMCID: PMC3472537 DOI: 10.1155/2012/365752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Figure 1Examples of physiological detection (a–d) and physiological discrimination (e–h) approaches from the aided CAEP literature. Results across these studies demonstrate significant amplification effects (unaided versus aided) for physiological detection, but very limited amplification effects for physiological discrimination. All figures were modified from published figures; the appropriate citation is indicated for each panel (see Table 1 for details).
Outline of the experimental conditions used in the studies cited in Figure 1. Note that the parameters listed below are specific to the conditions used to generate the waveform data presented in Figure 1 and do not necessarily represent all conditions presented in each study. The eight studies included represent aided CAEP data in the literature for which unaided and aided waveforms were able to be reproduced.
| Subjects | Experimental design | Source | ||||||
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| (a) McNeil et al., 2009 [ | 1 | 68 yo male; severe to profound SNHL | /ba/ | 115 | 750* | 60 dB nHL | Unaided and aided |
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| (b) Rapin and Graziani, 1967 [ | 1 | 21 mo female; rubella, sedated | 500-Hz tone | Not specified | Not specified | 109 dB re: 0.0002 dynes/cm2 | Unaided and aided |
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| (c) Gravel et al., 1989 [ | 1 | 7 mo male; severe to profound SNHL | /da/ | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | Unaided and aided (aid set to user settings) |
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| (d) Korczak et al., 2005 [ | 7 | Adults; severe to profound SNHL | /ba/ and /da/ | 150 | 950 | 80 dB ppeSPL | Unaided and aided (aid set to MCL) |
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| (e) Billings et al., 2007 [ | 13 | Young adults; normal hearing | 1000-Hz tone | 757 | 1910 | 50 dB SPL | Unaided and aided (20 dB gain) |
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| (f) Tremblay et al., 2006 [ | 7 | Young adults; normal hearing | /si/ | 655 | 1910 | 64 dB SPL | Unaided and aided (average gain of 19 dB) |
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| (g) Billings et al., 2011 [ | 9 | Young adults; normal hearing | 1000-Hz tone | 756 | 1910 | 40 dB SPL | Unaided and aided (gain of 20 dB) |
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| (h) Korczak et al., 2005 [ | 4 | Adults; moderate SNHL | /ba/ and /da/ | 150 | 950 | 85 dB HL | Unaided and aided (aid set to MCL) |
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*Reference does not state whether this value refers to onset to onset, or offset to onset. All other interstimulus intervals (ISIs) refer to offset to onset.
Three recordings of hearing aid output. Specific characteristics of the three hearing aid recordings used in this study to elicit aided CAEPs.
| Hearing Aid | Gain at 1000 Hz1 | Input2 | Output SNR3 | |
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| Recording 1 | A | 30 dB SPL | 25 dB SPL | 11 dB |
| Recording 2 | B | 30 dB SPL | 25 dB SPL | 8 dB |
| Recording 3 | B | 10 dB SPL | 45 dB SPL | 23 dB |
1Gain with a 45 dB SPL input (electroacoustically verified).
2Input: input to hearing aid microphones in the sound field.
3Output SNR: difference between hearing-aid-processed signal and noise at 1000 Hz (1/3 octave band).
Figure 2Experimental design. One-third octave band levels at 1000 Hz are shown for the three hearing-aid-processed recordings. Scaling of the recordings resulted in Near θ, Low, Mid, and High conditions. The shaded background shows the background noise masker level relative to hearing aid signal and noise levels.
Figure 3Frequency spectra of hearing aid noise for each of the three hearing aid conditions. Values are 1/3 octave bands with center frequencies between 200 and 6300 Hz. Hearing aid noise was measured for the 59-dB signal level condition for each recording. The general pattern of noise spectra is similar across conditions with a spectral peak at 1000 Hz, the frequency of the signal. The noise floor of the measurement system is shown with the dashed line (note: the lower limit of the sound level meter was 10.5 dB).
Figure 4Grand average (n = 12) butterfly plots and global field power (GFP) waveforms of physiological detection and physiological discrimination results. Waveforms are collapsed across hearing aid recordings. Near θ (top left), Low (middle left), Mid (top right), and High (middle right) conditions are displayed with the Cz-electrode highlighted. Bottom panels show overlaid comparisons for Near θ versus Low conditions and Mid versus High conditions. Robust differences are shown for physiological detection (bottom left) and minimal differences are shown for physiological discrimination (bottom right).
Figure 5Area measurements for Near θ and Low conditions for three recordings. Low conditions yielded higher area values than Near θ conditions for all three hearing aid recordings, demonstrating aided CAEP morphology differences that are present for physiological detection.
Figure 6Mean latency and amplitude measures for Low, Mid, and High conditions as a function of hearing aid recording (error bars: standard error of the mean). Generally, a change from Low to Mid conditions results in decreases in latency and increases in amplitude, and a change from Mid to High results in minimal change in latency and amplitude.
Statistical anlalysis. A linear mixed model representation of the repeated measures ANOVA resulted in a main effect of the level contrast with post-hoc comparisons where the main effect was significant.
| Conditions | Main effect | Hearing aid A (Recording 1) | Hearing aid B (Recording 2) | Hearing aid B (Recording 3) | ||||||||
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| Low to Mid level | ||||||||||||
| N1 Latency (ms) | 9.36 | 3,97 | <0.0001 | 13.78 | 1,97 | 0.0003 | 4.03 | 1,97 | 0.0474 | 10.25 | 1,97 | 0.0018 |
| P2 Latency (ms) | 17.53 | 3,96 | <0.0001 | 30.52 | 1,96 | <0.0001 | 0.47 | 1,96 | 0.4955 | 21.6 | 1,96 | <0.0001 |
| N1 Amplitude ( | 6.92 | 3,97 | 0.0003 | 0.03 | 1,97 | 0.868 | 4.18 | 1,97 | 0.0435 | 16.54 | 1,97 | <0.0001 |
| P2 Amplitude ( | 3.16 | 3,96 | 0.0282 | 2.84 | 1,96 | 0.0954 | 0.67 | 1,96 | 0.4134 | 5.96 | 1,96 | 0.0164 |
| Mid to High level | ||||||||||||
| N1 Latency (ms) | 0.64 | 3,97 | 0.5894 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| P2 Latency (ms) | 0.38 | 3,97 | 0.7698 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| N1 Amplitude ( | 0.31 | 3,97 | 0.8163 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| P2 Amplitude ( | 2.07 | 3,96 | 0.109 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Figure 7Cz-electrode waveforms for two representative individuals across the three hearing aid recordings. For both participants, the Near θ condition shows an absent or very small response, while the Low condition shows a more pronounced response. Mid and High responses are present and similar to each other. Effects of hearing aid recording are somewhat apparent with the most robust waveforms occurring in the Hearing Aid B (Recording 3) condition.
Figure 8Individual N1 latency and amplitude values demonstrating the physiological discrimination approach. Low, Mid, and High conditions are shown for Hearing Aid B (Recording 3). The general trends, consistent with Figure 6, show considerable changes from Low to Mid conditions and minimal changes from Mid to High conditions. Variability across individuals is evident with some individuals contradicting the general trends.