Literature DB >> 8975004

Spontaneous otoacoustic emissions in preterm neonates: prevalence and gender effects.

T Morlet1, A Lapillonne, C Ferber, R Duclaux, L Sann, G Putet, B Salle, L Collet.   

Abstract

A number of lines of evidence indicate that the human cochlea is fully functional as a mature sound transducer by 6 months of age. However, information about the development of the active cochlear mechanisms and notably the development of outer hair cell (OHC) activity is yet incomplete. Recording and analysis of otoacoustic emissions (OAEs), probably generated by the OHCs of the organ of Corti, have led to a better understanding, in humans, of how sounds are analysed in the cochlea by means of active mechanisms. Evoked OAEs (EOAEs) and spontaneous OAEs (SOAEs), when they can be recorded in full-term and preterm neonates, show different characteristics from those in adults, suggesting that maturation of the peripheral auditory system is incomplete at birth. To learn more about this maturation, using the best-established facts concerning SOAEs in adults, such as their greater prevalence in females and also in right ears, SOAEs were studied in more detail in 81 preterm neonates, from 30 to 40 weeks of conceptional age, all presenting bilateral EOAEs according to objective criteria. The first finding of this study was that SOAEs existed and could be recorded as of 30 weeks of conceptional age in humans. Some SOAE characteristics in preterm neonates, such as prevalence, peak number and acoustic frequencies, showed similarity with full-term neonates. Comparison of other criteria between the two populations, such as greater SOAE prevalence in right ears and higher SOAE peak number in females, suggested that these developmental factors emerge around term in humans. Comparison of SOAE characteristics between male and female preterms suggested that male preterms were less advanced in peripheral auditory development than were female preterms.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8975004     DOI: 10.1016/0378-5955(95)00144-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hear Res        ISSN: 0378-5955            Impact factor:   3.208


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