Comorbidity and Procedural Factors Associated With Auditory Brainstem Response Outcomes in Children Under Anesthesia
Christina Zhu, Henna Tiwary, Ashwini M Tilak, Sophia I Jaguan, Hengameh Behzadpour, Susan Verghese, Tracey Ambrose, Diego Preciado, Brian K Reilly

TL;DR
This study found that children's heart and lung conditions, along with the type of medical procedure, more strongly affect hearing test results than the type of anesthesia used.
Contribution
The study identifies comorbidities and procedural context as stronger predictors of ABR outcomes than anesthesia type in children.
Findings
Children with cardiac or respiratory comorbidities were significantly more likely to show hearing loss in ABR tests.
Combined procedures were associated with a higher likelihood of normal hearing outcomes compared to standalone ABR testing.
Anesthesia type (propofol vs. sevoflurane) did not significantly affect ABR thresholds after adjusting for patient health factors.
Abstract
Introduction We aim to evaluate the influence of patient comorbidities and procedural context (standalone vs. combined procedures) on auditory brainstem response (ABR) outcomes in children and to explore whether anesthesia type (propofol vs. sevoflurane) contributes to differences in hearing thresholds. Methods A retrospective chart review was conducted of 403 pediatric patients who underwent sedated ABR testing between October 2020 and 2023 at a tertiary children’s hospital. Demographic, anesthetic, and clinical variables, including neurological, cardiac, and respiratory comorbidities, were analyzed. Hearing outcomes were categorized as normal versus any hearing loss across click and tone-burst frequencies. Logistic regression analyses examined associations between hearing loss, anesthesia type, comorbidities, and procedural context, adjusting for American Society of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics · Anesthesia and Neurotoxicity Research
