Abstract

To provide an overview of electrophysiological and behavioural outcomes from a large UK centres data set on children diagnosed with auditory neuropathy (ANSD) between 2002 and March 2018. A systematic audit was undertaken, collating the electrophysiological data from auditory brainstem response (ABR) follow-up, risk factors, and later behavioural results/management. These were then compared to look for trends between groups. The study sample consisted of 118 925 infants born, with 46 (0.039%, 0.39 per 1000 births) being diagnosed with congenital ANSD (39 bilateral, seven unilateral). Twenty-nine per cent of ears with ANSD had short latency components on ABR testing. Forty-four per cent of ears with present cochlear microphonics but absent transient-evoked otoacoustic emissions (TE-OAE) and no ABR went on to have profound behavioural hearing threshold levels. All but one child went on to show a hearing loss on behavioural testing. ANSD was not confined to the population from neonatal intensive care units: there were three bilateral and five unilateral cases in the typically developing infant population. The incidence of ANSD is higher in this sample than that reported previously in the literature. Children who had cochlear microphonics with absent ABR and absent TE-OAE had significantly worse later behavioural outcomes than other patterns of electrophysiological results.

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