Eleven children with infantile autism or autistic-like conditions were examined with oculomotor tests and with auditory brainstem response audiometry. Measurements of voluntary, horizontal non-predictable saccades showed that the eye motor function was abnormal in six (55 per cent) of the eleven patients. The saccades were hypometric in all six instances and the saccadic velocity was reduced in four instances. The abnormalities observed are consistent with brain dysfunction, in most cases probably indicating ponto-cerebellar involvement. In five instances ABR was found to be abnormal which indicates brainstem dysfunction. Oculomotor dysfunction and/or ABR abnormality was observed in eight (73 per cent) of the patients studied.
Auditory brainstem responses were compared in 24 autistic children, 7 children with other childhood psychoses, and 31 normal children. One-third of the autistic children showed abnormal ABR indicative of brainstem dysfunction and correlating with muscular hypotonia and severe language impairment. The children with other psychoses and the normal children showed normal results.
Sixty-two patients with vertigo were examined with ABR. Eight of the 30 patients with vestibular neuronitis had abnormal ABR indicating brain stem dysfunction. Most of the patients with abnormal ABR showed continued ABR abnormality after recovery from the disease. Only one patient with epidemic vertigo had abnormal ABR, the remaining 15 patients had no signs of brain stem involvement. All 16 patients with benign positional vertigo had normal ABR.
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