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1/21. Vestibular function in auditory neuropathy.

    Auditory neuropathy is characterized by mild-to-moderate pure-tone hearing loss, poor speech discrimination out of proportion with this loss, absent or abnormal auditory brainstem responses and normal outer hair cell function as measured by otoacoustic emissions and cochlear microphonics. We followed three patients in our clinic whom we classified as auditory neuropathy patients. These patients also complained of balance disorders and we report our auditory and vestibular system analyses of these patients. The data presented herein include results of audiometric tests (serial pure-tone audiometry and speech discrimination tests), otoacoustic emissions, auditory-evoked brainstem responses and vestibular function tests (clinical tests of balance, electronystagmography, damped rotation tests and vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials). In all patients, pure-tone audiometry revealed mild-to-moderate sensorineural hearing loss, markedly poor speech discrimination scores and absent auditory-evoked brainstem responses, all in the presence of normal otoacoustic emissions. Balance tests (caloric tests and damped rotation test) were abnormal. saccades, smooth pursuit eye movements and optokinetic nystagmus were normal in all patients. Neurological and motor system evaluations were normal in all patients. These three auditory neuropathy patients manifest a disorder of cochlear nerve function in the presence of normal outer hair cell activity. They additionally manifest a disorder of the vestibular nerve and its end organs. We conclude that, in patients with isolated auditory neuropathy, the vestibular branch of the VIIIth cranial nerve and its innervated structures may also be affected. We suggest the use of the term "cochlear neuropathy" to characterize those patients with involvement of only the auditory branch of the VIIIth cranial nerve and its innervation.
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2/21. An isolated and sporadic auditory neuropathy (auditory nerve disease): report of five patients.

    Five patients of various ages with difficulty in speech discrimination were evaluated. All showed evidence of abnormal auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) beginning with the VIIIth cranial nerve. Broad summating potentials were evoked on their electrocochleograms (EcochGs) and they all exhibited almost normal cochlear outer hair cell function by otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) recordings. Behavioural audiometric testing revealed a mild to moderate elevation of pure-tone threshold in all patients. The shape of their pure-tone losses varied, being predominantly low-frequency in four patients (rising slope pattern) and flat across all frequencies in one patient. speech intelligibility scores of all patients were poor and out of proportion to what would have been expected if threshold elevation of pure-tone was of cochlear origin (i.e. markedly poor scores on the speech audiogram with good scores on the auditory comprehension test). patients were neurologically normal when the hearing impairment was first manifested. We suggest that this type of hearing impairment is due to an isolated and sporadic disorder of auditory nerve function. It occurs in isolation and does not seem to be part of a generalized neuropathological process.
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3/21. Auditory neuropathy in children.

    Auditory neuropathy is a sensorineural disorder characterized by absent or abnormal auditory brainstem evoked potentials and normal cochlear outer hair cell function. A variety of processes is thought to be involved in its pathophysiology and their influence on hearing may be different. We present here the diagnostic sequence and management of two new cases of auditory neuropathy in breastfeeding children.
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4/21. auditory perception in auditory neuropathy: clinical similarity with auditory verbal agnosia.

    The precise features of auditory perception in patients with auditory neuropathy have not been well described. In the present study, we examined auditory perception in a patient with auditory neuropathy. The patient was a right-handed 7-year-old boy. His chief complaint was delayed speech and suspected of verbal learning disability. He could talk, read and repeat rather fluently but could not understand fully what was asked. V-IQ, P-IQ and F-IQ of Wechsler Scale for Children III-R were 53, 118 and 81, respectively. Pure tone audiogram was completely normal. His speech discrimination ability was very poor. He could identify environmental sounds with visual matching. He could differentiate intensity difference but not time difference. This phenomenon was reported in patients with hemispheric symptoms. These clinical features are very similar to verbal auditory agnosia. ABR showed no response at 90dBnHL alternating clicks and tone bursts. Click evoked and distortion product otoacoustic emissions (OAE) were normal. Electrocochleogram was also normal. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocity was completely normal. Pa of MLR and N1 of SVR were present. His diagnosis should be "pure type" of auditory neuropathy or auditory nerve disease. Importance of both ABR and OAE examination should be widely announced and auditory neuropathy must be campaigned stressed to be clinical entity among personnel who take care of children with speech delay.
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5/21. Electrocochleography in auditory neuropathy.

    Auditory neuropathy (AN) is a disorder characterized by the absence or the severe impairment of the auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) together with the preservation of otoacoustic emissions and/or cochlear microphonic (CM). We recorded transtympanic electrocochleography (ECohG) evoked by 0.1 ms clicks in one young adult and in four children having distortion product otoacoustic emissions and absent ABRs. In all but one patient CM and summating potential (SP) were present with normal threshold, and their amplitudes appeared comparable to or higher than the values obtained from subjects with normal hearing. The compound action potential (CAP) was absent in two patients while in one subject CM and SP were followed by a highly desynchronized neural activity. A broad CAP was found in two children and the threshold appeared clearly elevated in one of them, while it showed only a mild elevation in the other. No correlation was found between CAP and behavioral thresholds. These results suggest that ECohG can be useful in AN diagnoses since it is the only reliable tool in evaluating the auditory peripheral function in the presence of a desynchronized ABR.
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6/21. Screening and follow up assessment in three cases of auditory neuropathy.

    Three children with auditory neuropathy are described. Two were detected via a targeted neonatal hearing screening programme based on auditory brain stem response testing, and one via the routine health Visitor Distraction Test. Auditory neuropathy is an important but poorly understood disorder which has implications on planning future hearing screening policy and management of hearing impairment.
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7/21. cochlear implantation in patients with auditory neuropathy of varied etiologies.

    OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: Auditory neuropathy is a relatively recently described pattern of hearing loss characterized by preservation of outer hair cell function despite absent brainstem auditory evoked responses. Intact outer hair cell function is demonstrated by the presence of otoacoustic emissions and/or a measurable cochlear microphonic on electrocochleography, whereas no synchronous neural activity (absent action potentials) is seen on acoustically evoked brainstem auditory evoked response testing. The study reviews the authors' experience with six patients diagnosed with auditory neuropathy, four of whom have undergone cochlear implantation. MATERIALS AND methods: A retrospective review of all medical and audiological charts at the University of virginia hospitals (Charlottesville, VA) was performed to identify patients who have undergone cochlear implantation or have been diagnosed with auditory neuropathy, or both. RESULTS: Six patients with hearing loss attributable to auditory neuropathy were identified, four of whom have undergone cochlear implantation. Causes varied, including congenital, infectious, and idiopathic origins. Adults demonstrated subjective auditory perception on promontory stimulation, whereas no repeatable brainstem auditory evoked response waveforms could be demonstrated on pediatric promontory stimulation testing. patients with implants demonstrated implant-evoked brainstem auditory evoked responses and improved audiological performance. CONCLUSIONS: The six cases presented in the study represent varied causes and, probably, varied sites of lesions of auditory neuropathy. Promontory stimulation has been valuable, particularly in adults. cochlear implantation allows the opportunity to provide a supraphysiological electrical stimulation to the auditory nerve, with the hope of reintroducing synchronous neural activity. Greater confidence and enthusiasm for cochlear implantation in appropriately selected patients with auditory neuropathy are gained through experience with such diverse cases.
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8/21. Auditory neuropathy in friedreich ataxia. A report of two cases.

    friedreich ataxia (FA) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disease with autosomical recessive inheritance. The purpose of this paper is to present two cases of FA with auditory neuropathy, demonstrated by Otoacoustic emissions (OAE) and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP). The patients were two adolescent girls. Both patients underwent behavioral pure-tone audiometry, BAEP, OAE, motor nerve conduction measurement, and magnetic resonance image studies. Both girls showed at least five of nine clinical criteria for FA. They also showed abnormal BAEP and normal OAE indicating auditory neuropathy. One patient showed normal thresholds on behavioral pure-tone audiometry, whereas the other patient showed a mild sensorineural hearing loss. In one case there was absence of peripheral caloric vestibular response, and electronystagmographic abnormalities compatible with cerebellar dysfunction. Cochlear function as assessed by OAE had not been reported previously in cases of FA. We conclude that auditory neuropathy should be considered in patients diagnosed as FA. Furthermore, BAEP and OAE should be included in the diagnostic routine in these patients.
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9/21. Progressive auditory neuropathy in patients with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy.

    OBJECTIVE: To investigate auditory neural involvement in patients with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). methods: Auditory assessment was undertaken in two patients with LHON. One was a 45 year old woman with Harding disease (multiple-sclerosis-like illness and positive 11778mtDNA mutation) and mild auditory symptoms, whose auditory function was monitored over five years. The other was a 59 year old man with positive 11778mtDNA mutation, who presented with a long standing progressive bilateral hearing loss, moderate on one side and severe to profound on the other. Standard pure tone audiometry, tympanometry, stapedial reflex threshold measurements, stapedial reflex decay, otoacoustic emissions with olivo-cochlear suppression, auditory brain stem responses, and vestibular function tests were undertaken. RESULTS: Both patients had good cochlear function, as judged by otoacoustic emissions (intact outer hair cells) and normal stapedial reflexes (intact inner hair cells). A brain stem lesion was excluded by negative findings on imaging, recordable stapedial reflex thresholds, and, in one of the patients, olivocochlear suppression of otoacoustic emissions. The deterioration of auditory function implied a progressive course in both cases. Vestibular function was unaffected. CONCLUSIONS: The findings are consistent with auditory neuropathy-a lesion of the cochlear nerve presenting with abnormal auditory brain stem responses and with normal inner hair cells and the cochlear nucleus (lower brain stem). The association of auditory neuropathy, or any other auditory dysfunction, with LHON has not been recognised previously. Further studies are necessary to establish whether this is a consistent finding.
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10/21. Isolated monolateral neurosensory hearing loss as a rare sign of neuroborreliosis.

    lyme disease, or borreliosis, is a zoonosis transmitted by borrelia burgdorferi which also involves the central nervous system (CNS), in 15% of affected individuals, with the occurrence of aseptic meningitis, fluctuating meningoencephalitis, or neuropathy of cranial and peripheral nerves. Encephalopathy with white matter lesions revealed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans in late, persistent stages of lyme disease has been described. In this report, we describe a patient with few clinical manifestations involving exclusively the eighth cranial nerve, monolaterally and diffuse bilateral alterations of the white matter, particularly in the subcortical periventricular regions at cerebral MRI. This single patient study shows that the search for antibodies against Borrelia burgdoferi should always be performed when we face a leukoencephalopathy of unknown origin. An isolated lesion of the eighth cranial nerve can be the only neurologic sign in patients with leukoencephalopathy complicating lyme disease.
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