Auditory Brainstem Response Test at Different Stimulus Rates in Normal-Hearing Adults Living With HIV

Author:

De Necker Adriana1ORCID,Biagio-de Jager Leigh1ORCID,Stoltz Anton Carel2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of Pretoria, South Africa

2. Division of Infectious Diseases, Steve Biko Academic Hospital, Pretoria, South Africa

Abstract

Purpose The study investigated whether the auditory brainstem response (ABR) at a baseline and at higher repetition rates can detect if neurodegeneration has occurred in adults living with HIV who present with normal behavioral pure-tone thresholds. Method An exploratory research design was used. Forty adults with HIV (80 ears, 57.5% female; M age = 26.3 years, SD = 3.68) and 20 adults without HIV participated. Phase 1 compared ABR absolute and interwave latencies at a baseline rate. Phase 2 examined the effect of HIV status and category of immunodeficiency on ABR absolute Wave V latency and Wave V latency shift at increased stimulus rates. Analysis included a two-way analysis of variance of the interaction between stimulus rate and HIV status and between CD4+ category and rate, and multiple regression analysis. Results In adults living with HIV, the baseline ABR yielded prolonged Wave III and V absolute latencies and interpeak prolongations in 22.5%. Interaural Wave V latency differences were present in 15% of participants. An additional 15% of ears presented with abnormal Wave V at increased rates. No significant interaction between HIV status and rate in either ear or between CD4+ category and rate was found in either ear ( p > .05). Although rate and gender contributed significantly to the prediction of Wave V latency of the rate study (left and right, p < .001), HIV status did not (left and right, p > .05). Conclusions Although the interaction of HIV status and CD4+ with rate was not significant, more ears were identified with abnormal results at increased stimulus rates than with the baseline ABR alone. The ABR at increased rates may therefore be a valuable addition for the identification of individuals living with HIV with auditory neural deficiencies.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing

Reference46 articles.

1. Ackley S. Herzberger-Kimball L. Burns S. & Balew S. D. (2006). Auditory brainstem response testing: Stimulus rate revisited Audiology. Retrieved from http://www. audiologyonline. com/articles/article_detail. asp

2. The Effects of Click Rate on the Auditory Brain Stem Response (ABR) in Patients with Varying Degrees of HIV-Infection

3. HIV/AIDS and Auditory Evoked Potentials

4. HIV-Related Ototoxicity

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