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Original Article

Frequency-Specific Aspects of the Auditory Brainstem Response Threshold Elicited by 1000-Hz Filtered Clicks in Subjects with Sloping Cochlear Hearing Losses

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Pages 1-11 | Received 10 Jul 1991, Accepted 21 Nov 1991, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The frequency specificity of the ABR threshold evoked by a 1000-Hz filtered click was determined in subjects with sloping cochlear hearing losses, both high- and low-frequency in character. The results show that the ABR threshold evoked by this stimulus is low-frequency specific. The standard error in estimating the 1000-Hz pure-tone threshold (PTT) is 10.4 dB, which equals that for estimating the 3 000-Hz PTT from the routinely used click-evoked ABR threshold [1]. The ABR threshold evoked by a 1000-Hz filtered click can therefore be regarded as an accurate tool to predict the pure-tone hearing loss at 1000-Hz. In comparison with the ABR threshold evoked by a click masked with 1590-Hz high-pass noise [6], the ABR threshold evoked by a 1000-Hz filtered click has a larger dynamic range, yields a larger number of useful responses and is less time consuming. For clinical low-frequency-specific ABR threshold assessment, the 1000-Hz filtered click is therefore preeminently useful.

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