Bilateral hemodynamic responses to auditory stimulation in newborn infants

Kalle Kotilahti(University of Helsinki), Ilkka Nissilä(University of Helsinki), Minna Huotilainen(May Institute), Riikka Mäkelä(University of Helsinki), Nasia Gavrielides(University of Helsinki), Tommi Noponen(University of Helsinki), Patrick Björkman(University of Helsinki), Vineta Fellman(Helsinki University Hospital), T. Katila(University of Helsinki)
Neuroreport
July 29, 2005
Cited by 63

Abstract

We studied hemodynamic auditory evoked responses of 20 healthy full-term neonates with near-infrared spectroscopy. The instrument used allows the measurements to be performed simultaneously above both auditory cortices. The stimulation consisted of 5-s trains of sound (700-ms interstimulus interval) with a 25-s silent interval. In response to the stimulation, a significant increase in concentration of oxygenated hemoglobin was detected in 14 out of 21 measurements. The mean latency of the largest response was 9.63+/-2.20 s (mean+/-SD) and the mean amplitude was 1.02+/-0.53 microM. The response amplitude was significantly larger in active (1.28+/-0.59 microM) than in quiet sleep (0.76+/-0.32 microM). The latency of the oxygenated hemoglobin concentration response was significantly shorter (r=-0.70 and p=0.0023) for infants with higher gestational age.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis