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No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds

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No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds. / Guest, H.; Munro, K.J.; Couth, S. et al.
In: Trends in Hearing, Vol. 23, 30.09.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Guest, H, Munro, KJ, Couth, S, Millman, RE, Prendergast, G, Kluk, K, Murray, C & Plack, C 2019, 'No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds', Trends in Hearing, vol. 23. https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216519874165

APA

Guest, H., Munro, K. J., Couth, S., Millman, R. E., Prendergast, G., Kluk, K., Murray, C., & Plack, C. (2019). No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds. Trends in Hearing, 23. https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216519874165

Vancouver

Guest H, Munro KJ, Couth S, Millman RE, Prendergast G, Kluk K et al. No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds. Trends in Hearing. 2019 Sept 30;23. Epub 2019 Sept 13. doi: 10.1177/2331216519874165

Author

Guest, H. ; Munro, K.J. ; Couth, S. et al. / No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds. In: Trends in Hearing. 2019 ; Vol. 23.

Bibtex

@article{7fdca45318f2404b802e5b9981814d5c,
title = "No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds",
abstract = "The acoustic reflex (AR), a longstanding component of the audiological test battery, has received renewed attention in the context of noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy-the destruction of synapses between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers. Noninvasive proxy measures of synaptopathy are widely sought, and AR thresholds (ARTs) correlate closely with synaptic survival in rodents. However, measurement in humans at high stimulus frequencies-likely important when testing for noise-induced pathology-can be challenging; reflexes at 4 kHz are frequently absent or occur only at high stimulus levels, even in young people with clinically normal audiograms. This phenomenon may partly reflect differences across stimulus frequency in the temporal characteristics of the response; later onset of the response, earlier onset of adaptation, and higher rate of adaptation have been observed at 4 kHz than at 1 kHz. One temporal aspect of the response that has received little attention is the interstimulus interval (ISI); inadequate duration of ISI might lead to incomplete recovery of the response between successive presentations and consequent response fatigue. This research aimed to test for effects of ISI on ARTs in normally hearing young humans, measured at 1 and 4 kHz. Contrary to our hypotheses, increasing ISIs from 2.5 to 8.5 s did not reduce ART level, nor raise ART reliability. Results confirm that clinically measured ARTs-including those at 4 kHz-can exhibit excellent reliability and that relatively short (2.5 s) ISIs are adequate for the measurement of sensitive and reliable ARTs.",
keywords = "acoustic reflex, auditory nerve, cochlear synaptopathy, middle-ear-muscle reflex, retrocochlear disorder",
author = "H. Guest and K.J. Munro and S. Couth and R.E. Millman and G. Prendergast and K. Kluk and C. Murray and C. Plack",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/2331216519874165",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "Trends in Hearing",
issn = "2331-2165",
publisher = "SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - No Effect of Interstimulus Interval on Acoustic Reflex Thresholds

AU - Guest, H.

AU - Munro, K.J.

AU - Couth, S.

AU - Millman, R.E.

AU - Prendergast, G.

AU - Kluk, K.

AU - Murray, C.

AU - Plack, C.

PY - 2019/9/30

Y1 - 2019/9/30

N2 - The acoustic reflex (AR), a longstanding component of the audiological test battery, has received renewed attention in the context of noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy-the destruction of synapses between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers. Noninvasive proxy measures of synaptopathy are widely sought, and AR thresholds (ARTs) correlate closely with synaptic survival in rodents. However, measurement in humans at high stimulus frequencies-likely important when testing for noise-induced pathology-can be challenging; reflexes at 4 kHz are frequently absent or occur only at high stimulus levels, even in young people with clinically normal audiograms. This phenomenon may partly reflect differences across stimulus frequency in the temporal characteristics of the response; later onset of the response, earlier onset of adaptation, and higher rate of adaptation have been observed at 4 kHz than at 1 kHz. One temporal aspect of the response that has received little attention is the interstimulus interval (ISI); inadequate duration of ISI might lead to incomplete recovery of the response between successive presentations and consequent response fatigue. This research aimed to test for effects of ISI on ARTs in normally hearing young humans, measured at 1 and 4 kHz. Contrary to our hypotheses, increasing ISIs from 2.5 to 8.5 s did not reduce ART level, nor raise ART reliability. Results confirm that clinically measured ARTs-including those at 4 kHz-can exhibit excellent reliability and that relatively short (2.5 s) ISIs are adequate for the measurement of sensitive and reliable ARTs.

AB - The acoustic reflex (AR), a longstanding component of the audiological test battery, has received renewed attention in the context of noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy-the destruction of synapses between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers. Noninvasive proxy measures of synaptopathy are widely sought, and AR thresholds (ARTs) correlate closely with synaptic survival in rodents. However, measurement in humans at high stimulus frequencies-likely important when testing for noise-induced pathology-can be challenging; reflexes at 4 kHz are frequently absent or occur only at high stimulus levels, even in young people with clinically normal audiograms. This phenomenon may partly reflect differences across stimulus frequency in the temporal characteristics of the response; later onset of the response, earlier onset of adaptation, and higher rate of adaptation have been observed at 4 kHz than at 1 kHz. One temporal aspect of the response that has received little attention is the interstimulus interval (ISI); inadequate duration of ISI might lead to incomplete recovery of the response between successive presentations and consequent response fatigue. This research aimed to test for effects of ISI on ARTs in normally hearing young humans, measured at 1 and 4 kHz. Contrary to our hypotheses, increasing ISIs from 2.5 to 8.5 s did not reduce ART level, nor raise ART reliability. Results confirm that clinically measured ARTs-including those at 4 kHz-can exhibit excellent reliability and that relatively short (2.5 s) ISIs are adequate for the measurement of sensitive and reliable ARTs.

KW - acoustic reflex

KW - auditory nerve

KW - cochlear synaptopathy

KW - middle-ear-muscle reflex

KW - retrocochlear disorder

U2 - 10.1177/2331216519874165

DO - 10.1177/2331216519874165

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

JO - Trends in Hearing

JF - Trends in Hearing

SN - 2331-2165

ER -