Amplitude modulation following responses (AMFR) to single near-threshold 40-Hz or 80-Hz amplitude-modulated tones of 1 kHz were recorded in 48 normal children between the ages of 2 months and 14 years. Children under the age of 2 years were tested during natural sleep, and older children were tested awake. The objectives of this study were to find out how the AMFR changes with age and to determine the most effective modulation frequency for objective threshold assessment at different ages. The optimal modulation frequency changed from higher to lower modulation frequencies at about 13 years. In younger children, the 80-Hz AMFR was larger than the 40-Hz AMFR. The 40-Hz response became similar to the adult response by the age of 14 years, while the 80-Hz response had an amplitude greater than half of an adult response by the age of 1 year, changed very little during the investigated period, and reached the amplitude of adult responses at the end of the investigated period.
The registration of brainstem potentials currently represents one of the most common methods in objective audiological diagnostics. However, regardless of their use, they are still known to possess important disadvantages, such as low specificity and validity in the lower frequency range due to broadband stimuli, or uncertainties due to the need for subjective evaluation. One potential solution to these problems could involve the registration of amplitude modulation following responses (AMFR). These potentials are being discussed much more regularly within the anglo-american literature due to their known frequency specificity within the high frequency range (resulting from a very narrow frequency band of stimulation), and also their ability to permit assessment of the hearing threshold at lower frequencies. Another additional advantage of AMFR results from the simple statistical verification of its presence.Extensive studies on the influence of both stimulating and recording parameters have also shown that the registration of AMFR could prove to be a very promising audiological tool, with past interest being focussed primarily on the optimal modulation frequency, the influence of vigilance of the generation of potentials, and the precise assessment of an objective threshold.
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