Purpose: Cortical auditory evoked potentials may serve as an early indicator
of developmental problems in the auditory cortex. The aim of the study was
to determine the effect on neonatal cortical auditory processing of clinical
conditions occurring in early prematurity.
Methods: Sixty-seven preterm infants born at 29 weeks mean gestational age
(range, 23\u201334 weeks) were recorded at a mean postconception age of 35
weeks, before discharge from the third level neonatal intensive care unit. The
average of 330 responses to standard 1000 Hz pure tones delivered in an
oddball paradigm was recorded at frontal location. Data of 45 of 67 recruited
premature infants were available for analysis. Mean amplitudes calculated
from the data points of 30 milliseconds centered on P1 and N2 peaks in the
waveforms of each subject were measured. The effect of perinatal clinical
factors on cortical auditory evoked responses was evaluated.
Results: The amplitude of P1 component was significantly lower in infants with
bronco-pulmonary dysplasia (P \ubc 0.004) and retinopathy of prematurity (P \ubc
0.03). The multivariate analysis, done to evaluate the relative weight of
gestational age and bronco-pulmonary dysplasia and/or retinopathy of prematurity
on cortical auditory evoked potentials components, showed an effect of
clinical factors on P1 (P \ubc 0.005) and of gestational age on N2 (P \ubc 0.02).
Conclusions: Cortical auditory processing seems to be influenced by clinical
conditions complicating extremely preterm birth