1988
DOI: 10.1203/00006450-198804000-00004
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Reflex Modification Audiometry: Assessment of Acoustic Sensory Processing in the Term Neonate

Abstract: A B S T R A a . Behavioral and physiological work in animals and adult humans have established the sensitivity of various procedures and allowed delineation of the neuroanatomical pathways involved in sensory processing. Herein we used the glabellar reflex and reflex modification procedures to assess acoustic sensory processing capabilities in the term newborn infant. The eyeblink-eliciting device consisted of a miniature solenoid which could deliver a controlled tap. A photoreflective densitometer attached to… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The Newcastle sedation score developed by Cook [17] was based on the Glasgow Coma scale (GCS). The amplitude of the blink reflex increases as a function of an increased tap [22]. In comparison with the original GCS used as a sedation scoring system, it achieved an identical r 2 of 0.59.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The Newcastle sedation score developed by Cook [17] was based on the Glasgow Coma scale (GCS). The amplitude of the blink reflex increases as a function of an increased tap [22]. In comparison with the original GCS used as a sedation scoring system, it achieved an identical r 2 of 0.59.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…However, prepulse inhibition may be reduced or absent in neonates, indicating that further maturation of brain structures is necessary to obtain levels of sensorimotor gating found in school-age children and adults [3234]. Similarly, startle responses to an acoustic stimulus can be found in mice at the time of ear opening (PDs 12–13) [20], while the time course for maturation of prepulse inhibition can extend beyond the postweaning period [17].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The investigation of temporal summation can be useful in quantifying hearing loss (Florentine, Fastl, & Buus, 1988;Stephens, 1976), and adding prepulse inhibition to the list of methods available could be helpful in this cIinical endeavor. Given its sensitivity to stimulus manipulations, the startle response has been proposed as a sensory assessment tool, especially in audiological assessment of infants and handicapped children and adults (Anday, Cohen, Kelley, & Hoffman, 1988;Reiter, Goetzinger, & Press, 1981). The utility of the startle response in the assessment of sensory abilities derives from the fact that it is a graded reflex, with variations in response amplitude, probability, and latency determined either by variations in the eliciting stimulus itself or by variations in prepulses that precede the eliciting stimulus.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%