ABR amplitude behaviour to condensation (C) and rarefaction (R) clicks was investigated in normal ears, ears affected by Ménière's disease and ears with high-frequency hearing loss (HF ears). The wave IV-V amplitude-intensity function was steeper in ABRs evoked by R than by C clicks. This may suggest that two different cochlear generator components, one intensity-dependent as well as one polarity-dependent, contribute to click-evoked ABRs. Wave IV-V amplitude was significantly higher in Ménière ears compared to HF ears in spite of comparable 2-4 kHz hearing loss in the two groups. Hence, audiometric steepness (which is lower in Ménière ears than in HF ears) seems to predict the wave IV-V amplitude decline more precisely than the 2-4 kHz perception threshold. The wave IV-V dispersion variable (SR IV-V) was close to normal in Ménière ears, while wave IV-V was more dispersed in HF ears. In general, C click ABRs were less affected than R click ABRs by 'peripheral' factors (i.e. intensity and audiometric steepness).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/01050399409047482DOI Listing

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