Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Electrophysiology of Cranial Nerve Testing: Auditory Nerve
View through CrossRef
Summary:
The electrocochleogram and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) are electrophysiologic signals used to assess the auditory nerve. The electrocohleogram includes the cochlear microphonic, the cochlear summating potential, and the eighth nerve compound action potential. It is used predominantly for hearing assessment and for diagnosis of Ménière disease and auditory neuropathy. Brainstem auditory evoked potentials are used for hearing assessment, diagnosis of dysfunction within the cochlea, the auditory nerve, and the brainstem auditory pathways up to the level of the mesencephalon, and intraoperative monitoring of these structures. The earliest BAEP component, wave I, and the eighth nerve compound action potential reflect the same process—the initial depolarization in the distal auditory nerve. Brainstem auditory evoked potential wave II receives contributions from the region of the cochlear nucleus and from the second depolarization in the distal auditory nerve. Wave III and later components are entirely generated rostral to the auditory nerve. Interpretation of BAEP studies is based on waves I, III, and V; auditory nerve dysfunction is manifested as prolongation of the I–III interpeak interval or absence of waves III and V. Eighth nerve tumors can cause a variety of BAEP abnormalities depending on which structures they affect. Adverse intraoperative BAEP changes can have many etiologies, including direct mechanical or thermal injury of tissue, ischemia (including cochlear ischemia or infarction due to compromise of the internal auditory artery), eighth nerve stretch, systemic or localized hypothermia, and artifactual BAEP changes due to technical factors.
Title: Electrophysiology of Cranial Nerve Testing: Auditory Nerve
Description:
Summary:
The electrocochleogram and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) are electrophysiologic signals used to assess the auditory nerve.
The electrocohleogram includes the cochlear microphonic, the cochlear summating potential, and the eighth nerve compound action potential.
It is used predominantly for hearing assessment and for diagnosis of Ménière disease and auditory neuropathy.
Brainstem auditory evoked potentials are used for hearing assessment, diagnosis of dysfunction within the cochlea, the auditory nerve, and the brainstem auditory pathways up to the level of the mesencephalon, and intraoperative monitoring of these structures.
The earliest BAEP component, wave I, and the eighth nerve compound action potential reflect the same process—the initial depolarization in the distal auditory nerve.
Brainstem auditory evoked potential wave II receives contributions from the region of the cochlear nucleus and from the second depolarization in the distal auditory nerve.
Wave III and later components are entirely generated rostral to the auditory nerve.
Interpretation of BAEP studies is based on waves I, III, and V; auditory nerve dysfunction is manifested as prolongation of the I–III interpeak interval or absence of waves III and V.
Eighth nerve tumors can cause a variety of BAEP abnormalities depending on which structures they affect.
Adverse intraoperative BAEP changes can have many etiologies, including direct mechanical or thermal injury of tissue, ischemia (including cochlear ischemia or infarction due to compromise of the internal auditory artery), eighth nerve stretch, systemic or localized hypothermia, and artifactual BAEP changes due to technical factors.
Related Results
Differential Diagnosis of Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: A Review
Differential Diagnosis of Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome: A Review
Abstract
Thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) is a complex and often overlooked condition caused by the compression of neurovascular structures as they pass through the thoracic outlet. ...
Cortical Representations of Speech in a Multi-talker Auditory Scene
Cortical Representations of Speech in a Multi-talker Auditory Scene
Abstract
The ability to parse a complex auditory scene into perceptual objects is facilitated by a hierarchical auditory system. Successive stages in the hierarchy ...
Phrenic Nerve Block for Management of Post-Thoracic Outlet Decompression Cough: A Case Report and Literature Review
Phrenic Nerve Block for Management of Post-Thoracic Outlet Decompression Cough: A Case Report and Literature Review
Abstract
Introduction
Thoracic outlet syndrome is a group of disorders arising from compressive forces on the neurovascular bundle in that region due to different etiologies. This...
Auditory processing deficit in a patient with Ramsay Hunt syndrome
Auditory processing deficit in a patient with Ramsay Hunt syndrome
Objective:
The present study was undertaken to investigate the auditory processing skills in an individual diagnosed as ‘herpes zoster oticus with polycranialis multipl...
Metabolic decline in an insect ear: correlative or causative for age-related auditory decline?
Metabolic decline in an insect ear: correlative or causative for age-related auditory decline?
One leading hypothesis for why we lose our hearing as we age is a decrease in ear metabolism. However, direct measurements of metabolism across a lifespan in any auditory system ar...
Estimation of the Cranial Capacity in Dry Human Skull Bones
Estimation of the Cranial Capacity in Dry Human Skull Bones
Background: The Cranial capacity is a measure of the volume of the interior of the cranium, which is used as a rough indicator of the size of brain. Craniometric stud...
Morphometry of the cranial cavity of dogs of brachycephalic breeds
Morphometry of the cranial cavity of dogs of brachycephalic breeds
Morphometric studies of the skull in dogs are mainly aimed at studying the relationship between the facial and cerebral divisions in different breeds of dogs, their morphotyping an...
The Therapeutic Dilemma of Cochlear Nerve Deficiency: Cochlear or Brainstem Implantation?
The Therapeutic Dilemma of Cochlear Nerve Deficiency: Cochlear or Brainstem Implantation?
ObjectiveTo compare the outcomes between 2 age‐matched cohorts of children with cochlear nerve deficiency: those receiving auditory brainstem implants (group A) or cochlear implant...

