7 results on '"Sterkers-Artières, Françoise"'
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2. A Retrospective Multicenter Study Comparing Speech Perception Outcomes for Bilateral Implantation and Bimodal Rehabilitation
- Author
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Blamey, Peter J, Maat, Bert, Başkent, Deniz, Mawman, Deborah, Burke, Elaine, Dillier, Norbert, Beynon, Andy, Kleine-Punte, Andrea, Govaerts, Paul J, Skarzynski, Piotr H, Huber, Alexander M, Sterkers-Artières, Françoise, Van de Heyning, Paul, O'Leary, Stephen, Fraysse, Bernard, Green, Kevin, Sterkers, Olivier, Venail, Frédéric, Skarzynski, Henryk, Vincent, Christophe, Truy, Eric, Dowell, Richard, Bergeron, François, Lazard, Diane S, Blamey, Peter J, Maat, Bert, Başkent, Deniz, Mawman, Deborah, Burke, Elaine, Dillier, Norbert, Beynon, Andy, Kleine-Punte, Andrea, Govaerts, Paul J, Skarzynski, Piotr H, Huber, Alexander M, Sterkers-Artières, Françoise, Van de Heyning, Paul, O'Leary, Stephen, Fraysse, Bernard, Green, Kevin, Sterkers, Olivier, Venail, Frédéric, Skarzynski, Henryk, Vincent, Christophe, Truy, Eric, Dowell, Richard, Bergeron, François, and Lazard, Diane S
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To compare speech perception outcomes between bilateral implantation (cochlear implants [CIs]) and bimodal rehabilitation (one CI on one side plus one hearing aid [HA] on the other side) and to explore the clinical factors that may cause asymmetric performances in speech intelligibility between the two ears in case of bilateral implantation. DESIGN: Retrospective data from 2247 patients implanted since 2003 in 15 international centers were collected. Intelligibility scores, measured in quiet and in noise, were converted into percentile ranks to remove differences between centers. The influence of the listening mode among three independent groups, one CI alone (n = 1572), bimodal listening (CI/HA, n = 589), and bilateral CIs (CI/CI, n = 86), was compared in an analysis taking into account the influence of other factors such as duration of profound hearing loss, age, etiology, and duration of CI experience. No within-subject comparison (i.e., monitoring outcome modifications in CI/HA subjects becoming CI/CI) was possible from this dataset. Further analyses were conducted on the CI/CI subgroup to investigate a number of factors, such as implantation side, duration of hearing loss, amount of residual hearing, and use of HAs that may explain asymmetric performances of this subgroup. RESULTS: Intelligibility ranked scores in quiet and in noise were significantly greater with both CI/CI and CI/HA than with a CI-alone group, and improvement with CI/CI (+11% and +16% in quiet and in noise, respectively) was significantly better than with CI/HA (+6% and +9% in quiet and in noise, respectively). From the CI/HA group, only subjects with ranked preoperative aided speech scores >60% performed as well as CI/CI participants. Furthermore, CI/CI subjects displayed significantly lower preoperative aided speech scores on average compared with that displayed by CI/HA subjects. Routine clinical data available from the present database did not explain the asymmetrical results
- Published
- 2015
3. A Retrospective Multicenter Study Comparing Speech Perception Outcomes for Bilateral Implantation and Bimodal Rehabilitation
- Author
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Blamey, Peter J., primary, Maat, Bert, additional, Başkent, Deniz, additional, Mawman, Deborah, additional, Burke, Elaine, additional, Dillier, Norbert, additional, Beynon, Andy, additional, Kleine-Punte, Andrea, additional, Govaerts, Paul J., additional, Skarzynski, Piotr H., additional, Huber, Alexander M., additional, Sterkers-Artières, Françoise, additional, Van de Heyning, Paul, additional, O’Leary, Stephen, additional, Fraysse, Bernard, additional, Green, Kevin, additional, Sterkers, Olivier, additional, Venail, Frédéric, additional, Skarzynski, Henryk, additional, Vincent, Christophe, additional, Truy, Eric, additional, Dowell, Richard, additional, Bergeron, François, additional, and Lazard, Diane S., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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4. Predictive Factors of Cochlear Implant Outcomes in the Elderly
- Author
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Mosnier, Isabelle, primary, Bebear, Jean-Pierre, additional, Marx, Mathieu, additional, Fraysse, Bernard, additional, Truy, Eric, additional, Lina-Granade, Geneviève, additional, Mondain, Michel, additional, Sterkers-Artières, Françoise, additional, Bordure, Philippe, additional, Robier, Alain, additional, Godey, Benoit, additional, Meyer, Bernard, additional, Frachet, Bruno, additional, Poncet, Christine, additional, Bouccara, Didier, additional, and Sterkers, Olivier, additional
- Published
- 2014
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5. Predictive Factors of Cochlear Implant Outcomes in the Elderly.
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Mosnier, Isabelle, Bebear, Jean-Pierre, Marx, Mathieu, Fraysse, Bernard, Truy, Eric, Lina-Granade, Geneviève, Mondain, Michel, Sterkers-artières, Françoise, Bordure, Philippe, Robier, alain, Godey, Benoit, Meyer, Bernard, Frachet, Bruno, Poncet, Christine, Bouccara, Didier, and Sterkers, Olivier
- Subjects
COCHLEAR implants ,COCHLEA surgery ,GERIATRIC surgery ,DISEASES in older people ,TREATMENT of deafness ,SPEECH perception - Abstract
Objective: To analyze predictive factors of cochlear implant outcomes and postoperative complications in the elderly. Study Design: Prospective, longitudinal study performed in 10 tertiary referral centers. Methods: Ninety-four patients aged 65-85 years with a profound, postlingual hearing loss were evaluated before implantation, at time of activation, and 6 and 12 months after cochlear implantation. Speech perception and lipreading were measured using disyllabic word recognition in quiet and noise, and lipreading using disyllabic words and sentences. The influence of preoperative factors on speech perception in quiet and noise at 12 months was tested in a multivariate analysis. Complications, presence of tinnitus and of vestibular symptoms were collected at each evaluation. Results: The effect of age was observed only in difficult noisy conditions at SNR 0 dB. Lipreading ability for words and sentences was negatively correlated with speech perception in quiet and noise. Better speech perception scores were observed in patients with shorter duration of hearing deprivation, persistence of residual hearing for the low frequencies, the use of a hearing aid before implantation, the absence of cardiovascular risk factors, and in those with implantation in the right ear. General and surgical complications were very rare, and the percentage of vestibular symptoms remained stable over time. Conclusion:This study demonstrates that cochlear implantation in the elderly is a well-tolerated procedure and an effective method to improve communication ability. Advanced age has a low effect on cochlear implant outcome. Analyses of predictive factors in this population provide a convincing argument to recommend treatment with cochlear implantation as early as possible in elderly patients with confirmed diagnosis of a severe-to-profound hearing loss and with only limited benefit from hearing aid use in one ear. © 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Collaborateurs
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Aït-Mansour, Aïda, Avan, Paul, Bellier, Ludovic, Bizaguet, Éric, Bouccara, Didier, Caclin, Anne, Ceccato, Jean-Charles, Collette, Jean-Louis†, Dauman, René, Eliot, Marie-Madeleine, Frachet, Bruno, Gavilan-Cellié, Isabelle, Gentil, Anthony, Kofoed, Jens, La Croix, Candice, Hanson, Jean-Noël, Le Her, François, Lina-Granade, Geneviève, Lorenzi, Antoine, Moradkhani, Mahmoud, Marianowski, Rémi, Meyer, Bernard, Meyer-Bisch, Christian, Ohresser, Martine, Péan, Vincent, Poncet-Wallet, Christine, Renard, Christian, Rizzoli, Mélanie, Sterkers-Artières, Françoise, Thai-Van, Hung, Tronche, Sophie, Venail, Frédéric, Veuillet, Évelyne, Vincent, Christophe, and Vormès, Émilie
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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7. Improvement of cognitive function after cochlear implantation in elderly patients.
- Author
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Mosnier I, Bebear JP, Marx M, Fraysse B, Truy E, Lina-Granade G, Mondain M, Sterkers-Artières F, Bordure P, Robier A, Godey B, Meyer B, Frachet B, Poncet-Wallet C, Bouccara D, and Sterkers O
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Depression diagnosis, Female, Geriatric Assessment, Hearing Tests, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Speech Perception physiology, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants, Cognition Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
Importance: The association between hearing impairment and cognitive decline has been established; however, the effect of cochlear implantation on cognition in profoundly deaf elderly patients is not known., Objective: To analyze the relationship between cognitive function and hearing restoration with a cochlear implant in elderly patients., Design, Setting, and Participants: Prospective longitudinal study performed in 10 tertiary referral centers between September 1, 2006, and June 30, 2009. The participants included 94 patients aged 65 to 85 years with profound, postlingual hearing loss who were evaluated before, 6 months after, and 12 months after cochlear implantation., Interventions: Cochlear implantation and aural rehabilitation program., Main Outcomes and Measures: Speech perception was measured using disyllabic word recognition tests in quiet and in noise settings. Cognitive function was assessed using a battery of 6 tests evaluating attention, memory, orientation, executive function, mental flexibility, and fluency (Mini-Mental State Examination, 5-word test, clock-drawing test, verbal fluency test, d2 test of attention, and Trail Making test parts A and B). Quality of life and depression were evaluated using the Nijmegen Cochlear Implant Questionnaire and the Geriatric Depression Scale-4., Results: Cochlear implantation led to improvements in speech perception in quiet and in noise (at 6 months: in quiet, 42% score increase [95% CI, 35%-49%; P < .001]; in noise, at signal to noise ratio [SNR] +15 dB, 44% [95% CI, 36%-52%, P < .001], at SNR +10 dB, 37% [95% CI 30%-44%; P < .001], and at SNR +5 dB, 27% [95% CI, 20%-33%; P < .001]), quality of life, and Geriatric Depression Scale-4 scores (76% of patients gave responses indicating no depression at 12 months after implantation vs 59% before implantation; P = .02). Before cochlear implantation, 44% of the patients (40 of 91) had abnormal scores on 2 or 3 of 6 cognition tests. One year after implant, 81% of the subgroup (30 of 37) showed improved global cognitive function (no or 1 abnormal test score). Improved mean scores in all cognitive domains were observed as early as 6 months after cochlear implantation. Cognitive performance remained stable in the remaining 19% of the participants (7 of 37). Among patients with the best cognitive performance before implantation (ie, no or 1 abnormal cognitive test score), 24% (12 of 50) displayed a slight decline in cognitive performance. Multivariate analysis to examine the association between cognitive abilities before implantation and the variability in cochlear implant outcomes demonstrated a significant effect only between long-term memory and speech perception in noise at 12 months (SNR +15 dB, P = .01; SNR +10 dB, P < .001; and SNR +5 dB, P = .02)., Conclusions and Relevance: Rehabilitation of hearing communication through cochlear implantation in elderly patients results in improvements in speech perception and cognitive abilities and positively influences their social activity and quality of life. Further research is needed to assess the long-term effect of cochlear implantation on cognitive decline.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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