1. Cochlear Implant in Far Advanced Otosclerosis
- Author
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Carolina Romani, María Inés Salvadores, Adriana Queirolo, Gabriela Dotto, Luis Rubiño, Carlos Augusto Curet, and Hector E. Ruiz
- Subjects
Hearing aid ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Profound sensorineural hearing loss ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Adult patients ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Cochlear implant ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Medicine ,Otosclerosis ,Audiometry ,business ,Cochlea - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate clinical characteristics of these patients, with otosclerosis, complications,and observations of the benefits of implants to medium and long term.Method: Thirty two adult patients, age 50 years old, 22 women and 10 men, with profound sensorineural hearing loss, and otosclerosis far advanced, were treated with multi-channel cochlear implants. All had otological examination, psychological, audiometry, and 0% of speech discriminations with-well-fitted hearing aid, CTS (4 with RMI) to determine hypodensity or morphologic changes.Results: CTS with morphologic changes in the cochlea in 24/32 patients (Rottevel’s grading): 9 had type 2 (localized retrofenestral disease), 6 type 3 (retrofenestral diffuse). Full insertion inside the cochlea in 28/32 cases, where in 6 patients it was necessary to drill the bone in 4 to 6 mm in the tympanic basal turn. four patients had partial insertion of electrodes, 1 of them with 2 electrodes in IAC and leakage of CSF, 1 with stimulation of the facial nerv...
- Published
- 2012
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