Abstract

Auditory neuropathy is characterized by mild-to-moderate pure-tone hearing loss, poor speech discrimination out of proportion with this loss, absent or abnormal auditory brainstem responses and normal outer hair cell function as measured by otoacoustic emissions and cochlear microphonics. We followed three patients in our clinic whom we classified as auditory neuropathy patients. These patients also complained of balance disorders and we report our auditory and vestibular system analyses of these patients. The data presented herein include results of audiometric tests (serial pure-tone audiometry and speech discrimination tests), otoacoustic emissions, auditory-evoked brainstem responses and vestibular function tests (clinical tests of balance, electronystagmography, damped rotation tests and vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials). In all patients, pure-tone audiometry revealed mild-to-moderate sensorineural hearing loss, markedly poor speech discrimination scores and absent auditory-evoked brainstem responses, all in the presence of normal otoacoustic emissions. Balance tests (caloric tests and damped rotation test) were abnormal. Saccades, smooth pursuit eye movements and optokinetic nystagmus were normal in all patients. Neurological and motor system evaluations were normal in all patients. These three auditory neuropathy patients manifest a disorder of cochlear nerve function in the presence of normal outer hair cell activity. They additionally manifest a disorder of the vestibular nerve and its end organs. We conclude that, in patients with isolated auditory neuropathy, the vestibular branch of the VIIIth cranial nerve and its innervated structures may also be affected. We suggest the use of the term "cochlear neuropathy" to characterize those patients with involvement of only the auditory branch of the VIIIth cranial nerve and its innervation.

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