[The influence of click polarity and stimulation rate on the auditory evoked response in relation to age].

Pediatr Med Chir

Istituto G. Gaslini, Centro di Audiovestibologia e logopedia, Genova, Italia.

Published: May 1990

In order to study the changes which occur in phase of the click stimulus and its relation to the stimulus repetition rate on the auditory brainstem response (ABR) as a function of age, the Authors recorded the ABR from the scalp's surface of 10 newborns and 40 infants, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year and 3 years old as well as from 10 normal adults. The stimulus was a square wave of 0.1 msec duration and 90 dBHL level. The stimulus equipment was calibrated twice under visual inspection to ensure that the C and R clicks resulted in an initial membrane deflection toward and from the ear drum respectively. No significant differences could be found for the latencies and amplitude in the C-R comparison. However, the mean values of the complete group of test subjects showed most intraindividual stability for the conventional click stimulation. The latency of the ABR with excitation of the cochlea seemed to be mainly determined by the internal oscillation sequence in the cochlea and not by the stimulus polarity. The amplitudes and latencies of the ABR components tend to decrease when the stimulus rate increases and the age decreases. The importance of the stimulus characteristics is discussed and some suggestions for clinical use of ABR are made.

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