Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Elizabeth A, Poth"'
Autor:
Daniel Dorgan, E. Emily Harruff, Angela G. Shoup, Robert C. Fifer, Raksha Jain, Jonathan Kil, Patrick A. Flume, Maria Gabriela Tupayachi Ortiz, Elizabeth A. Poth, Yun Jin M. Kim
Publikováno v:
Journal of Cystic Fibrosis. 20:288-294
Aminoglycosides are commonly used to treat infections in CF patients and are highly ototoxic. The incidence of tobramycin-induced hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo or dizziness (ototoxicity) varies widely from 0 to 56% secondary to variation in patient
Autor:
E Emily, Harruff, Jonathan, Kil, Maria Gabriela Tupayachi, Ortiz, Daniel, Dorgan, Raksha, Jain, Elizabeth A, Poth, Robert C, Fifer, Yun Jin M, Kim, Angela G, Shoup, Patrick A, Flume
Publikováno v:
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 20(2)
Aminoglycosides are commonly used to treat infections in CF patients and are highly ototoxic. The incidence of tobramycin-induced hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo or dizziness (ototoxicity) varies widely from 0 to 56% secondary to variation in patient
Publikováno v:
Hearing Research. 165:10-18
The frequency-modulation following response (FMFR) is a steady-state evoked response which may be a neural correlate of frequency discrimination. Aged subjects with normal hearing have abnormal frequency discrimination for low carrier frequencies and
Publikováno v:
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. 37:422-428
This study measured the masking level difference (MLD) for both 500-Hz tone detection and spondee word recognition in two groups of listeners. One group consisted of 9 elderly listeners with normal audiometric sensitivity bilaterally, up to at least
Publikováno v:
Hearing research. 161(1-2)
Wave V of the auditory brainstem response was measured to two 50-ms broadband noise bursts separated by silent gaps of varied duration (4, 8, 32, or 64 ms) for younger and older adults with normal hearing. All subjects had measurable wave V responses
Publikováno v:
Hearing research. 153(1-2)
The amplitude-modulation following response (AMFR) is a steady-state auditory response which may be an objective measure of intensity discrimination. Aged subjects with normal hearing have poorer intensity discrimination for low-frequency tones measu