The use of P300 latency to demonstrate cognitive dysfunction is important. P300 latency decreases with age in children and then increases with age in adults. It has been debated whether the relationship between age and P300 latency is linear or quadratic. If the relationship is linear, then at least two regression equations in opposite directions are required for children and for adults, and perhaps a third for the elderly. This is a report of data from an age-stratified sample of 97 normal individuals ages 5 through 85. The best regression equation is quadratic, using log transformed age, with accurate projection of 95% confidence limits for P300 latency by age. This quadratic regression simplifies the application of P300 latency across the life-span in the management of disorders affecting cognition, such as Traumatic Brain Injury, Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder, and Obstructive Sleep Apnea.
To compare auditory and visual P300 amplitude and latency magnitudes and topographies in patients with narcolepsy and normal subjects, 20 patients with polysomnographically-confirmed narcolepsy and 40 normal subjects were administered auditory and visual P300 testing using 31 evenly spaced scalp electrodes. Patients with narcolepsy were then administered baseline polysomnograms and objective (MSLT, Maintenance of Wakefulness Test or MWT) and subjective tests (Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Clinical Global Impression) of daytime sleepiness. Patients had longer 31-electrode mean age-adjusted auditory P300 latencies (406.0 +/- 27.8 vs. 385.7 +/- 28.9 ms, p = 0.012) and visual P300 latencies (427.3 +/- 29.0 vs. 411.4 +/- 27.7 ms., p = 0.044) than 40 normal subjects in the same age range. Age-adjusted auditory P300 latency was correlated with MWT (r = -0.49, p = 0.028), but not with any other clinical variable or measure of sleepiness. Age-adjusted visual P300 latency was not correlated with any clinical variable or measure of sleepiness. Patients with narcolepsy had longer auditory and visual P300 latencies than normal subjects.
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