Auditory brainstem responses to middle- and low-frequency tone pips

Audiology. 1984;23(1):75-84. doi: 10.3109/00206098409072823.

Abstract

Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) evoked by clicks allow a threshold evaluation for the high-frequency range (2-4 kHz) but not for middle and low frequencies (0.5-1 kHz). In 19 normally hearing subjects aged between 24 and 40 years. ABRs have been recorded using clicks and 0.5- and 1-kHz tone pips, with durations of 6 and 3 ms, respectively, and rise-decay times of 3 and 1.5 ms. The input signal was filtered by a passband filter of 20-5 000 Hz. Parameters of tracings elicited by the different kinds of stimuli are compared. Tone-pip ABR morphology does not show the conventional seven peaks but a single large vertex-positive wave. On the ascending branch high-frequency potentials, probably corresponding to the I, II, III and IV-V click-evoked peaks, were visible in some cases, but they rapidly disappeared as the stimulus intensity was decreased. Their 2.3-3 ms greater mean latency values are presumably related to the rise times of the stimuli employed. In terms of bioelectric generators, this large vertex-positive peak probably corresponds to the Jewett V wave. It probably represents a generalized asynchronous dendritic activity. Thus it is possible to obtain ABRs to middle- and low-frequency stimuli. Mean amplitude values of the slow wave are considerably higher than those of the Jewett V wave, but standard deviations are also larger. The positive wave has been identified in response to 1-kHz tone pips in 100% of cases at 30 dB nHL and in 52% of cases at 20 dB, while for 0.5-kHz tone pips in 73.7% of cases at 30 dB and in 57% at 20 dB. On the whole the threshold is located between 15 and 30 dB nHL.

MeSH terms

  • Acoustic Stimulation
  • Adult
  • Audiometry / methods*
  • Audiometry, Evoked Response / methods*
  • Auditory Threshold
  • Brain Stem / physiology
  • Evoked Potentials, Auditory*
  • Humans