Authors
Takako Fujioka, Claudia Freigang, Kie Honjo, J Jean Chen, Joyce L Chen, Sandra E Black, Donald T Stuss, Deirdre R Dawson, Bernhard Ross
Publication date
2020/5/1
Journal
Clinical Neurophysiology
Volume
131
Issue
5
Pages
1102-1118
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Objective
Stroke lesions in non-auditory areas may affect higher-order central auditory processing. We sought to characterize auditory functions in chronic stroke survivors with unilateral arm/hand impairment using auditory evoked responses (AERs) with lesion and perception metrics.
Methods
The AERs in 29 stroke survivors and 14 controls were recorded with single tones, active and passive frequency-oddballs, and a dual-oddball with pitch-contour and time-interval deviants. Performance in speech-in-noise, mistuning detection, and moving-sound detection was assessed. Relationships between AERs, behaviour, and lesion overlap with functional networks, were examined.
Results
Despite their normal hearing, eight patients showed unilateral AER in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the affected hand with reduced amplitude compared to those with bilateral AERs. Both groups showed increasing attenuation of later …
Total citations
Scholar articles