Brainstem potentials

Auditory stem potentials (BERA, Brainstem Evoked Responses Audiometry, BAEP, Brainstem Auditory Evoked Potentials, ABR, Auditory Brainstem Response) belong to objective hearing tests. This method is used to determine the hearing threshold and to examine the auditory pathway, i.e. to exclude a retrocochlear lesion. The response of the auditory nerve and subcortical centers to acoustic stimulation is measured. BERA is often used to screen the hearing of newborns and infants and determine whether they are suitable candidates for a cochlear implant. 1,2,3

Principle
When the brainstem is stimulated by a sound signal, electrical potentials are formed.

Execution
Tones are fed to the examinee's headphones, and electrical activity is recorded with electrodes attached to the examinee's head. Each ear is examined separately.

The result of the examination is a curve on which 5 waves are distinguished:

wave I – action potential VIII. cranial nerve (nervus vestibulocochlearis); wave II – nucleus cochlearis (and n. VIII); wave III – ipsilateral superior olivaris nucleus; wave IV – nucleus or axons of the lemniscus lateralis; wave V – inferior colliculus.

Factors that affect the BERA result:

age, gender, frequency and intensity of sound irritation,...

The BERA result is not affected by barbiturates or general anesthesia. Disorders of the peripheral vestibular system do not affect the BERA result. 3

Související články

 * Sluch • Vyšetření sluchu • Audiometrie (fyziologie) • Otoakustické emise • Ustálené evokované potenciály
 * Klasifikace sluchových poruch • Nedoslýchavost

Externí odkazy

 * Objektivní vyšetřovací metody v ORL