Retrocochlear Assessment Flashcards

1
Q

What is the cross-setion of Internal Auditory Canal (IAC)?

A
  • Facial nerve
  • Superior vestibular nerve
  • Inferior vestibular nerve
  • Acoustic nerve
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2
Q

What happens when there’s a tumor in IAC?

A

Medium or large tumor in IAC can affect part of the auditory nerve, but not all of it
- May affect the fibers that are adjacent to the auditory nerve

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3
Q

What are the standard ABR measures for acoustic tumor detection?

A

IT5= interaural time delay for Wave V
- Difference between sides should not exceed 0.2-0.3 ms

I-V delay= latency difference between Wave I and V
- If the delay exceeds a certain criterion value, this measure is positive for a tumor

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4
Q

Can the ABR detect acoustic tumors?

A

The larger the tumor, the easier its detection
- Detects nearly all medium and large acoustic tumors

Misses 30-50% of small (<1 cm) acoustic tumors
- All patients with suspicious clinical hearing and balance symptoms are sent for MRI

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5
Q

What are the drawbacks fof screening with an MRI?

A
  • Relatively expense ($2,100)
  • Not available everywhere
  • Invasive, anxiety producing, and uncomfortable test for some patients
  • Cannot be used on patients with implanted metal devices or materials
  • Most patients tested do not have a tumor
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6
Q

Why do standard ABR measures often fail to detect small tumors?

A

Small tumors exert less pressure and affect a smaller # of neural fibers than larger tumors

Not the only factors:

  • Many small tumors exert enough pressure to cause clinical symptoms
  • Many small tumors are detected by standard ABR measures

ABR measures are dominated by activity from a subset of 8th nerve fibers that may not be affected by the small tumor

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7
Q

How does the auditory system respond to click stimulus ABR?

A
  • Click stimulus is a wide band acoustic signal with as much low-frequency energy
  • Click-evoked ABR contains neural activity representing all frequency regions of the cochlea (not just HFs)
  • Standard ABR wave V latency is dominated by HF regions b/c lower-frequency contributions are phase-cancelled
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8
Q

What are derived band ABRs?

A

Neural contributions from different frequency regions of the cochlea can be obtained using the derived-band ABR method

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9
Q

What is the stacking technique?

A

Formed by first temporally aligning wave V of the derived-band ABRs, then summing the responses

Aligning the derived band ABRs eliminates phase cancellation of the lower frequency activity
- Stacked ABR amplitude reflects activity from all frequency regions of the cochlea, not just the high frequencies

Reduction of any neural activity due to a tumor, even a small tumor, will result in a reduction of the Stacked ABR amplitude

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10
Q

How can you minimize physiological noise in ABRs?

A

Estimation of unaveraged noise

Weighted averaging (Bayesian weighting)

  • Weights block of sweeps
  • Blocks of sweeps that have the lowest physiological noise are given the greatest weight in average

Termination of Averaging when residual noise level is low (20 nV)
- Stop averaging when the estimated noise in the average reaches a low level so that most of what we measure is response and not physiological noise

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11
Q

Describe the standard vs. stacked ABR measures?

A

The IT5 and I-V delay measures have less than 5% specificity
- IT5 and I-V delay correctly identify less than 5 out of every 100 non-tumor patients

But the Stacked ABR has 83% specificity
- Stacked ABR correctly identifies 83 out of every 100 non-tumor patients

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12
Q

Why is stacked ABR better than standard ABR?

A

Stacked ABR appears to have better sensitivity and specificity than the standard ABR for small tumors

In other worlds, the stacked ABR is better at:

  • Detecting small tumors
  • Decreasing the # of misdiagnosed non-tumor patients (i.e., decreasing the # of false-positives referred for MRI)
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