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Journal ArticleDOI

Brain stem responses evoked by stimulation of the mature cochlear nucleus with an auditory brain stem implant.

Martin O'Driscoll, +2 more
- 01 May 2011 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 3, pp 286-299
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TLDR
The morphology of the EABR varied with site of stimulation in 16 cases, but there was no consistent pattern of change with stimulation site, and there was a trend for more auditory electrodes to be present in stimulation sites that evoked EABRs with a higher number of peaks in the waveform.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Nucleus auditory brain stem implant (ABI) has been used in the hearing rehabilitation of totally deaf individuals for whom a cochlear implant is not an option such as in the case of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2). Intraoperative electrically evoked auditory brain stem responses (EABRs) are recorded to assist in the placement of the electrode array over the dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei in the lateral recess of the IVth ventricle of the brain stem. This study had four objectives: (1) to characterize EABRs evoked by stimulation with an ABI in adolescents and adults with NF2, (2) to evaluate how the EABR morphology relates to auditory sensations elicited from stimulation by an ABI, (3) to establish whether there is evidence of morphology changes in the EABR with site of stimulation by the ABI, and (4) to investigate how the threshold of the EABR relates to behavioral threshold and comfortably loud sensations measured at initial device activation. DESIGN: Intraoperative EABRs were recorded from 34 subjects with ABIs: 19 male and 15 female, mean age 27 yrs (range 12 to 52 yrs). ABI stimulation was applied at seven different sites using either wide bipolar stimulation across the array or in subsections of the array from medial to lateral and inferior to superior. The EABRs were analyzed with respect to morphology, peak latency, and changes in these characteristics with the site of stimulation. In a subset of eight subjects, additional narrow bipolar sites were stimulated to compare the intraoperative EABR threshold levels with the behavioral threshold (T) and comfortably loud (C) levels of stimulation required at initial device activation. RESULTS: EABRs were elicited from 91% of subjects. Morphology varied from one to four vertex-positive peaks with mean latencies of 0.76, 1.53, 2.51, and 3.64 msecs, respectively. The presence of an EABR from stimulation by electrodes across the whole array had a high predictive value for the presence of auditory electrodes at initial device activation. When examining subsections of the array, the absence of an EABR was a poor predictor for the absence of auditory electrodes. The morphology of the EABRs varied with site of stimulation in 16 cases, but there was no consistent pattern of change with stimulation site. There was a trend for more auditory electrodes to be present in stimulation sites that evoked EABRs with a higher number of peaks in the waveform. The EABR threshold was closer to the behavioral C level than the T level, but there was no overall correlation between the intraoperative EABR threshold level and the behavioral T and C levels. CONCLUSIONS: The presence of an intraoperative EABR corresponded well to the presence of auditory electrodes. The absence of an EABR from stimulating subsections of the array was not; however, a good indicator for the absence of auditory electrodes and the EABR from such stimulation would not be of assistance in identifying the nonauditory sections of the array to exclude in behavioral fitting of the device. The morphology of the EABR did not relate to site of stimulation. More peaks in the EABR was associated with a greater number of electrodes with auditory sensations, suggesting that correct positioning of the ABI activated more auditory subsystems within the cochlear nucleus. The intraoperative EABR thresholds did not correlate with the behavioral T and C levels and could not be used to assist in device fitting.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

New outcomes with auditory brainstem implants in NF2 patients.

TL;DR: The consensus opinion was that brainstem trauma is a primary factor in the variability of outcomes in NF2 patients, and ABI surgery should be accomplished with great care to minimize physical and venous trauma to the brainstem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory brainstem implantation after unsuccessful cochlear implantation of children with clinical diagnosis of cochlear nerve deficiency.

TL;DR: In this cohort of patients who had poor performance after cochlear implantation, ABI achieved significantly improved performance as measured by the CAP and was shown to successfully rehabilitate hearing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Initial Results of a Safety and Feasibility Study of Auditory Brainstem Implantation in Congenitally Deaf Children.

TL;DR: ABI surgery and device activation seem to be safe and feasible in this preliminary cohort of congenitally deaf children and the children are demonstrating some ability to discriminate between closed-sets words that differ by number of syllables (pattern perception).
Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory Brainstem Implantation in Neurofibromatosis Type 2: Experience From the Manchester Programme

TL;DR: The majority of patients with NF2 implanted with an ABI find the device a useful aid to communication in conjunction with LR and in recognizing common environmental sounds and a small proportion gain open set discrimination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory brainstem implant: electrophysiologic responses and subject perception.

TL;DR: Compared the perceptual sensation produced by bipolar electrical stimulation of auditory brainstem implant (ABI) electrodes with the morphology of electrically evoked responses elicited by the same bipolar stimulus in the same unanesthetized, postsurgical state, ABI electrodes that are associated with auditory sensations eliciting by bipolar stimulation are more likely to elicit evoking responses with a P3 wave or a middle-latency wave.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory-evoked far fields averaged from the scalp of humans

Don L. Jewett, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1971 - 
TL;DR: Under the conditions of skull and scalp boundaries and intracranial inhomogeneities, recordings from a single electrode position offer little indication as to the location of a wave's neural generator(s), whereas multiple recording sites may be more informative.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A robust and scalable clustering algorithm for mixed type attributes in large database environment

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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of Vestibular Schwannoma and Neurofibromatosis 2 in the North West of England over a 10-year Period: Higher Incidence than Previously Thought

TL;DR: The incidence of vestibular schwannoma in sporadic, neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) germ-line and mosaic form in sporadic and NF2-related VS is rising almost certainly due to increasing diagnosis in the magnetic resonance imaging era.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain stem auditory evoked responses: studies of waveform variations in 50 normal human subjects.

TL;DR: Brain stem auditory evoked responses (BAERs) were recorded in 50 normal adult subjects at various click rates and showed no statistically significant changes in amplitude or latency measurements with the passage of time.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between EAP and EABR thresholds and levels used to program the nucleus 24 speech processor: data from adults.

TL;DR: Either EAP or EABR thresholds can be used in combination with a limited amount of behavioral information to predict MAP T‐ and C‐levels with reasonable accuracy.
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