
pmid: 6824281
Twelve spasmodic dysphonia patients were evaluated by three different auditory brainstem response parameters; 75 % were abnormal. Three of the 12 had prolonged wave I-V interpeak latency. Seven had pathologic wave V latency shifts at a high stimulus rate. Amplitude ratios were normal for all subjects. The authors hypothesize that spasmodic dysphonia is a disorder of variable cranial nerve symptom presentations, and offer several possible models to account for its sporadic representation in the nervous system.
Adult, Male, Voice Disorders, Neural Conduction, Middle Aged, Cranial Nerve Diseases, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Reaction Time, Humans, Female, Hearing Loss, High-Frequency, Brain Stem
Adult, Male, Voice Disorders, Neural Conduction, Middle Aged, Cranial Nerve Diseases, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Reaction Time, Humans, Female, Hearing Loss, High-Frequency, Brain Stem
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