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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study explored further the relationship between peripheral and central auditory maturation on the basis of the auditory brain stem response. Auditory brain stem responses were recorded in preterm infants and adults to rarefaction and condensation click stimuli transduced through insert Tubephones. Infant recordings presented a triphasic waveform preceding wave I similar to that of the cochlear receptor potentials seen with adults during electrocochleography. Wave I latency and amplitude were found to be equivalent to those of adult subjects. Moreover, neither latency nor amplitude variability among infant wave I responses was found to be any greater than adults. Latencies of waves III and V, however, exhibited the expected differences relative to the adult comparison group. When the indirect evidence of cochlear receptor potentials in the infant are viewed adjacent to the observations that their ABR wave I latency, amplitude, and variability were entirely consistent with those of young adults, the data lend strong support for peripheral auditory electromaturity. These data are discussed relative to previously published reports of prolonged wave I latency in the infant which was attributed either to middle ear effects or immaturity of the cochlea and first order VIIIth nerve neurons.
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PMID:Auditory brain stem responses in preterm infants: evidence of peripheral maturity. 272 24

Seventy-five neonatal intensive care unit patients with given auditory brainstem response screening tests at 40 db and 70 db above the normal adult hearing threshold. The presence of wave V, the criterion for pass, was strongly related to postconceptual age: It appeared at 70 db in 50% of the infants tested at 32 weeks' PCA and at 40 db in 50% of the infants tested at 40 weeks' PCA. Forty-four infants failed the last test before NICU discharge (15 at 70 db and 29 at 40 db), but most infants were discharged at a PCA of less than 40 weeks. No significant correlation appeared between ABR test failure and intraventricular hemorrhage, hyaline membrane disease, perinatal asphyxia, hyperbilirubinemia, or aminoglycoside therapy. Follow-up information was obtained in 23 of the 36 "failing" infants who survived (8 died). This consisted of definitive hearing tests in ten patients and historical information supporting normal auditory function in 13 patients. One case of severe hearing loss was confirmed. Thus, most failures of the ABR screen apparently resulted from immaturity. These data raise doubts regarding the effectiveness of ABR screening in the NICU.
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PMID:Auditory brainstem responses in preterm neonates: maturation and follow-up. 709 25