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The relationship between auditory brainstem response latencies and behavioral thresholds in normal hearing infants and adults.

Hearing Research 1994 June 16
The relationship between behavioral thresholds and auditory brainstem response (ABR) latencies for 4 and 8 kHz tone pips were examined in normal-hearing 3-month-olds, 6-month-olds and adults. The latencies of waves I and V and the I-V interval of the ABR were analyzed. A linear latency-intensity function was also fit to each subject's latencies for each wave at several levels. The y-intercept of the latency-intensity function was used as a summary measure of latency to examine behavior-ABR correlations. The pattern of age-related change in behavioral threshold was not closely matched by age-related latency reduction for Wave I, Wave V or the I-V interval. However, 3-month-olds with higher behavioral thresholds had longer Wave V latencies and longer I-V intervals than 3-month-olds with lower behavioral thresholds. There was no significant difference in latency between 6-month-olds or adults with higher thresholds and 6-month-olds or adults with lower thresholds. There was also a significant correlation between the Wave V-Wave I latency-intensity intercept difference and behavioral threshold at both 4 and 8 kHz among 3-month-olds. The correlation was not significant among 6-month-olds or adults. These findings suggest that one of the factors responsible for immature behavioral thresholds at 3 months is related to transmission through the auditory brainstem. Because variability in hearing threshold among normal-hearing adults is low, it is not surprising that behavioral threshold is unrelated to ABR latency in this group. However, the lack of such a relationship among 6-month-olds implies that structures central to the auditory brainstem, either sensory or nonsensory, or both, must be responsible for immature behavioral thresholds after 6 months of age.

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