Hearing loss following Hemophilus influenzae meningitis in infancy. Diagnosis by evoked response audiometry
J. T. MacDonald and S. Feinstein
Bacterial meningitis is a major cause of sensorineural hearing loss during
childhood. This study compared the efficacy of auditory brain-stem evoked
response (ABER) testing with conventional conditioned orienting response
(COR) testing in the early diagnosis of postmeningitic deafness in 34
infants younger than 2 years of age, with a diagnosis of Hemophilus
influenzae meningitis. In most of the children (62%), results of the two
tests were in agreement. The use of ABER testing appeared to be more
effective than COR audiometry for the testing of infants younger than 6
months of age, for older children with perceptual handicaps, and for the
identification of small children with unilateral hearing loss.