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Original Article

Isochronic mapping of the auditory brainstem response: Normative results

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Pages 335-346 | Published online: 12 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Isochronic mapping involves recording multi-channel evoked potentials from scalp electrodes and plotting contours of peak latencies. In this study, auditory brainstem responses were recorded from 20 electrode sites for left, right and binaural stimulation of each ear of 10 male and 10 female, normally hearing, young adults. Analysis of the data showed that the stimulus parameters of intensity, polarity and rate had no significant effect on the maps. On monaural stimulation, wave V was recorded first at the contralateral mastoid and ipsilaterally frontally and last at the ipsilateral mastoid some 350 us later. Binaural stimulation gave a symmetrical map, with wave V recorded first frontally and last at the occiput. In contrast, wave III was recorded first ipsilaterally and frontally and last at the contralateral mastoid. Wave II was recorded first at the rear of the contralateral mastoid and last forward of the ipsilateral mastoid. Comparisons between these results and human physiological studies are in agreement for waves V and III but do not support the concept of the VIIIth nerve alone as the generator for wave II. These results suggest that this technique is a potentially useful diagnostic tool and it is intended to evaluate it by testing patients with a range of sensory, peripheral-neural and central-neural pathologies.

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