ASSR Flashcards
1
Q
Generator sites
A
- Starts at the cochlear level (IHC) - crucial for processing the sounds on the basilar membrane
- Neurons of the 8th nerve, cochlear nucleus, inferior colliculus and primary cortex
2
Q
What are the different stimulus used in ASSR?
A
- Amplitude Modulated Pulses
- Frequency Modulated Pulses
- Mixed Modulated Pulses
3
Q
What are amplitude modulated (AM) pulses
A
AM pulses are centred around a characteristic frequency and alternate amplitudes (max-min and max-half max)
4
Q
What are maximum and minimum pulses
A
The maximum and minimum amplitudes of the AM pulses
5
Q
What is the generation site
A
IHC create nanovolts (1000 x smaller than the potentials created by abr)
6
Q
How good is it at estimating hearing thresholds
A
IDK
7
Q
What are the advantages of ASSR
A
- Good at providing a rough estimate of hearing thresholds
- faster than abr
- testing both ears at the same time
- time locked to the stimulus
8
Q
What are the disadvantages of ASSR
A
- It is not able to detect retrocochlear pathologies - results could be absent or incorrect
- Can test both ears at the same time
- It is faster than ABR tone bursts
9
Q
What is frequency modulated (FM) pulses
A
- Is the number of pulses per second (82 Hz means 82 pulses per sec)
- There is not change to the amplitude but change to the frequency
10
Q
What is mixed modulation pulses
A
A combination of frequency and amplitude modulation
11
Q
What are the affects of of frequency (4)
A
- <20 Hz - ALR generator sites
- 20-60 Hz - MLR sites
- > 60 Hz - ABR sites
- > 70 Hz - ASSR not affected by sleep