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Auditory Brainstem Response Latency in Noise as a Marker of Cochlear Synaptopathy.

Golbarg MehraeiAnn E HickoxHari M BharadwajHannah GoldbergSarah VerhulstM Charles LibermanBarbara G Shinn-Cunningham
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Although there are suspicions that cochlear synaptopathy affects humans with normal hearing thresholds, no one has yet reported a clinical measure that is a reliable marker of such loss. By combining human and animal data, we demonstrate that the latency of auditory brainstem response wave-V in noise reflects auditory nerve loss. This is the first study of human listeners with normal hearing thresholds that links individual differences observed in behavior and auditory brainstem response timing to cochlear synaptopathy. These results can guide development of a clinical test to reveal this previously unknown form of noise-induced hearing loss in humans.
Keyphrases
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