Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

What 2 things can affect latency and amplitude?

A
  1. Gender
  2. Age
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2
Q

Females show ____ latency values and ____ amplitudes than males for later ABR waves (III, IV, V & VI).

A

Shorter, larger

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3
Q

Because the effect is negligible for wave I and more pronounced for later ABR waves, ____ are significantly shorter for females.

A

Interwave intervals

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4
Q

Adults up to ____ - it is best to establish separate norms for males and females

A

60 years of age

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5
Q

Gender and hearing loss

A
  • Females show little wave V latency change with increasing hearing loss,
  • Wave V latency in males increase ~0.1 ms for every 20 dB decrease in the effective click level (i.e., 20 dB drop in thresholds)
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6
Q

Why does gender play a role?

A

The mechanism underlying the difference is obscure.
- Differences in hearing sensitivity
- Body temperature
- Head size and brain dimension
- Physiologic and biochemical properties
- LIKELY greater travelling wave velocity in females and at young ages (less cochlear latency)

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7
Q

How does low body temperature affect ABR? Why?

A
  • With a drop in body temperature an increase in ABR wave latency is expected
    • Hypothermia in low-birth-weight infants
    • Persons in coma secondary to severe brain injury
  • This is due to delayed synaptic transmission and decreased axonal conduction velocity.
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8
Q

____ temperature slows things down

A

Low

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9
Q

____ temperature speeds things up

A

High

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10
Q

Open heart surgery need body temperature between ____ degrees C

A

28-32

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10
Q

How can temperature affect neuropathy patients?

A

Fever distorts and can eliminate ABR

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11
Q

What happens to interwave latency (I-V) below 37 degrees C?

A
  • Increases by 0.2 msec for every degree of body temperature below 37°C (hypothermia)
  • Think of cold as slower
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12
Q

What happens to interwave latency (I-V) above 37 degrees C?

A
  • Decreases by 0.15 msec for each degree of temperature above 37°C (hyperthermia)
  • Think of hot as faster
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13
Q

Is ABR affected by state of arousal?

A

ABR results are not affected by natural sleep state. Even extremely reduced states of arousal, such as narcolepsy and coma have no serious effect on ABR latency or amplitude.

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14
Q

Effects of drugs on ABR

A

ABR is generally resistant to sedatives (e.g., Chloral hydrate) and anesthetic agents (e.g., Nitrous oxide).

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15
Q

Muscular artifact on ABR

A

ABR wave components can be completely obscured by excessive muscle artifact, often arising from neck or jaw muscles.

16
Q

What are 3 offline manipulations (things you do with your data in the end)

A
  1. Summing repeated measures
  2. Subtracting repeated measures
  3. Smoothing
17
Q

How does summing repeated measures work?
- how much does it improve?

A
  • Same as if you had recorded all trials together
  • If you do two complete runs, have the same number of trials in each, and the subject state doesn’t change, summing will increase the signal-to-noise ratio by a factor of 1.414 (roughly 40% improvement)
18
Q

How does subtracting repeated measures work?

A
  • Removes anything consistent in the response
  • Estimate of background noise
19
Q

How does smoothing work?

A
  • This is low-pass filtering
  • Helpful when response is noisy
  • On-line low-pass filter often limited to 1500 Hz to make result look cleaner
20
Q

What are 3 cons to summing responses to alternate polarity stimuli?

A
  1. Reduces response quality (because each polarity response is a little different)
  2. Does not improve SNR as much as summing same polarity
  3. Noise reduction should be the same (as with single polarity summing)
21
Q

What are 2 pros to summing responses to alternate polarity stimuli?

A
  1. Reduces cochlear microphonic (this can be visualized by comparing the two polarities separately before summing)
  2. Reduces artifact
22
Q

What are 3 things that happen with subtracting responses to alternate polarity stimuli?

A
  • Removes most of the response
  • Preserves cochlear microphonic
    • The CM inverts with the stimulus
    • Minus a minus is a plus!
  • Preserves artifact
23
Q

If they don’t ____, it’s not ____

A

Repeat, complete

24
Q

What do you do if you can’t repeat?

A

Try splitting single measurement into split-halves

25
Q

What if waves repeat but are messy (e.g. difficult to identify specific peak latencies)?

A
  • Try summing repeated measures (a post-hoc way of increasing the number of averages)
  • Increase averages if possible
  • If RN is high, try to find source
    • Stressed patient, eyes open, neck tense
    • Unbraided electrode wire, fluorescent light, near wall plug, crossed wires, etc.
26
Q

What are 5 problems associated with wave I?
- how do you record
- what do you raise
- what can you use
- where can you record from
- what should you try

A
  1. Record at slower rates
    • 10.1
    • 7.1
  2. Raise high-pass filter (to 100 or 150 Hz)
  3. Use ear canal electrode (e.g. a Tiptrode), or TM electrode
    • Boosts the amplitude of wave I
  4. Record from earlobe
  5. Try a different polarity (rarefaction or condensation)
    • Usually rarefaction is clearest, but this is not always the case!
    • Look at the individual polarity waves
27
Q

What are 5 things associated with wave V?
- where do you record
- what do you vary
- what do you look for
- what do you do if it is very late
- what do you lower

A
  1. Record vertical montage (e.g. neck ref)
  2. Vary level to see L-I function
  3. Look for following negativity
  4. If it seems very late, use contralateral masking (to make sure not from other side)
  5. Lower high-pass filter (e.g. to 30 Hz)