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New Handbook for Auditory Evoked Responses
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Table of Contents

Preface

 

Acknowledgements

 

I. AUDITORY NEUROPHYSIOLOGY PRINCIPLES.

 

1. Overview of Auditory Neurophysiology: Past, Present, and Future.

 

2. Anatomic and Physiologic Principles.

 

3. Introduction to Auditory Evoked Response Measurement.

 

II. ELECTROCOCHLEOGRAPHY (ECochG).

 

4. Measurement, Analysis, and Interpretation

        Background

        Test protocols, parameters, and procedures

        Waveform analysis

        Non-pathologic factors influencing ECochG

        Trouble-shooting in ECochG recording

 

5. Clinical Applications and Populations.

        Audiologic assessment

        Diagnosis of Meniere's disease

        Retrocochlear auditory dysfunction

        Auditory neuropathy

        Intra-operative monitoring

 

III. AUDITORY BRAINSTEM RESPONSE (ABR) AND AUDITORY STEADY STATE RESPONSE (ASSR).

 

6. ABR Protocols, Parameters & Procedures.

        Background

        Basic ABR test protocol

        Stimulus parameters

        Acquisition parameters

        Step-by-step ABR measurement

 

7. ABR Analysis and Interpretation.

        Conventional waveform analysis

        Sophisticated waveform analysis

        Non-pathologic factors influencing ABR recording

        Trouble-shooting in ABR recording

        Interpretation of ABR in auditory dysfunction

 

8. Frequency-Specific ABR and ASSR.

        Background

        Newborn hearing screening and early identification of hearing loss

        Tone burst ABR protocols, parameters and procedures

        ASSR protocols, parameters and procedures

        Sedation

        Case reports

 

9. ABR: Pediatric Clinical Applications and Populations.

        Conductive auditory dysfunction

        Sensory auditory dysfunction

        Auditory neuropathy and retrocochlear auditory dysfunction

        Central nervous system pathologies

        Newborn hearing screening

 

10. ABR: Adult Clinical Applications and Populations.

        Sensory auditory dysfunction

        Retrocochlear auditory dysfunction

        Central nervous system pathologies

        Intra-operative monitoring

 

IV. CORTICAL AUDITORY EVOKED RESPONSES.

 

11. Auditory Middle Latency Response (AMLR).

        Background

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

12. Auditory Late Response (ALR).

        Background

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

13. P300 Response.

        Background

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

14. Mismatch Negativity (MMN) Response.

        Background

        Selected cortical auditory responses

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

v. NON-AUDITORY CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY.

 

15. Electrical and Myogenic Evoked Responses.

 

        Electrically Evoked Auditory Responses

        Clinical applications before and after cochlear implants

        Electrical compound action potentials (ECAP)

        Electrical auditory brainstem response (EABR)

        Electrical cortical auditory responses

 

        Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Responses (VEMP)

        Historical overview and clinical rationale    

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

        Electroneuronography (ENoG)

        Historical overview and clinical rationale

        Test protocols and procedures

        Analysis and interpretation

        Clinical applications and populations

 

APPENDICES

 

    A.  Normative Data for Infants and Adults

    B.  Auditory Electrophysiology Self Test

 

GLOSSARY.

 

REFERENCES.

 

NAME INDEX.

 

SUBJECT INDEX.

Promotional Information

Written for graduate students and practicing clinicians, the New Handbook for Auditory Evoked Responsesis an up-to-date and comprehensive source of practical information about auditory evoked responses, from electro-cochleography to cortical responses.

 

Authored by a clinical audiologist who records auditory evoked responses daily in his clinical practice, this book maintains a consistent writing-style and difficulty level from beginning to end.  The content is of direct interest to clinical audiologists and others involved in the clinical measurement of auditory evoked responses. The book includes an extensive review of test principles, protocols, and procedures required for clinical application of auditory evoked responses. The practical coverage of material includes guidelines for trouble-shooting and solving problems commonly encountered in the field.

 

Principles common to different auditory evoked responses, including anatomy and physiology and general measurement principles (Chs. 1-3), are introduced, allowing readers to learn the material from only this source without having to purchase an additional book to master the basics. At least one chapter is devoted to each major auditory evoked response, beginning with cochlear responses and continuing to the cortical evoked responses, electric evoked responses, and non-auditory responses (Chs. 4-16).  Readers are taught to record, analyze and interpret responses for various patient populations (Chs. 4-16).  Includes readable and clinically oriented reviews of extensive literature on complex responses, such as the P300 and MMN (Chs. 4-16), making it the only book of its kind to present a balanced coverage of evoked responses recorded from the entire auditory system (cochlea to cortex).  The literature on auditory evoked responses in diverse pathologies is reviewed and related to back to clinical practice so that readers do not have to locate additional journal articles (Chs. 4-16).  Important concepts, including the effects of measurement parameters and pathologies on auditory evoked responses, are illustrated through hundreds of clear drawings, to help enhance learning (Chs. 4-16).

About the Author

James W. Hall III, Ph.D. received a Masters degree from Northwestern University and, in 1979, his Ph.D. in audiology from Baylor College of Medicine under the direction of Dr. James Jerger.  Since then, he has held clinical and academic audiology positions at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, University of Texas School of Medicine-Houston, and the School of Medicine at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Hall is now Clinical Professor and Chief of Audiology in the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Florida in Gainesville. In addition to his administrative duties, he maintains a clinical practice at University of Florida Health Science Center, and serves as a clinical instructor and mentor in the Doctor of Audiology on-site and distance learning programs. 

 

Dr. Hall’s main research interests are in the area of auditory neurophysiology, clinical assessment of auditory processing disorders and central auditory nervous system function, newborn hearing screening, and tinnitus & hyperacusis.  Dr. Hall lectures internationally on these topics. He is the author of numerous journal articles, monographs, or book chapters, as well as the Handbook of Auditory Evoked Responses and Audiologists’ Desk Reference Volumes I and II, the Handbook of Otoacoustic Emissions and the New Handbook of Auditory Evoked Responses.

Reviews

"I can say with no reservations this manuscript is excellent and I am thrilled with the manner Dr. Hall has presented the information. This will be a textbook for both beginning students in audiology and those experienced clinical audiologists. The manner in which Dr. Hall discusses and explains the various technical concepts and terms makes reading this textbook extremely easy!This new edition will be an even greater success and will find its way into the hands of those audiologists not previously exposed to Dr. Hall's textbook." --Steven D. Smith, Auburn University "The sections on auditory steady state responses, auditory neuropathy, and mismatch negativity are excellent additions to this textbook. ! This text is much more comprehensive in nature [than competing books] and includes a much more detailed clinical application of auditory evoked potential measurements." --Albert R. De Chicchis, University of Georgia

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