Abstract

Whether click-evoked otoacoustic emissions (CEOAEs) have frequency specificity is an issue still subject to debate. In order to resolve this issue, changes in the frequency components of the CEOAE power spectrum, together with changes in compound action potential (CAP) thresholds before and after pure-tone exposure in guinea pigs, were examined. Changes in CAP thresholds immediately before and 1 h after exposure were compared with changes in the frequency components in the CEOAE power spectrum before and 1 h after exposure. The ILO 88 was used for measurement of CEOAEs. Total echo energy in the CEOAE power spectrum was converted into frequency bands of 1000 Hz. Shifts in filtered echo power (FEP) levels correlated maximally with those in CAP thresholds at 0.5 kHz above the same frequency. Stepwise regression indicated that only one step could be entered in a linear regression model using the variable of CAP threshold shifts at 0.5 kHz above the same frequency for all FEP shifts except FEP4.5. The remaining variables played a negligible role, since variance no longer changed when they were included in the regression equation. From these results, it was concluded that CEOAEs display frequency specificity. Influence on CEOAEs from higher frequencies is negligible.

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