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Monitoring Cochlear Health With Intracochlear Electrocochleography During Cochlear Implantation: Findings From an International Clinical Investigation

Authors :
O'Leary, S
Mylanus, E
Venail, F
Lenarz, T
Birman, C
Di Lella, F
Roland Jr, JT
Gantz, B
Beynon, A
Sicard, M
Buechner, A
Lai, WK
Boccio, C
Choudhury, B
Tejani, VD
Plant, K
English, R
Arts, R
Bester, C
O'Leary, S
Mylanus, E
Venail, F
Lenarz, T
Birman, C
Di Lella, F
Roland Jr, JT
Gantz, B
Beynon, A
Sicard, M
Buechner, A
Lai, WK
Boccio, C
Choudhury, B
Tejani, VD
Plant, K
English, R
Arts, R
Bester, C
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Electrocochleography (ECochG) is emerging as a tool for monitoring cochlear function during cochlear implant (CI) surgery. ECochG may be recorded directly from electrodes on the implant array intraoperatively. For low-frequency stimulation, its amplitude tends to rise or may plateau as the electrode is inserted. The aim of this study was to explore whether compromise of the ECochG signal, defined as a fall in its amplitude of 30% or more during insertion, whether transient or permanent, is associated with poorer postoperative acoustic hearing, and to examine how preoperative hearing levels may influence the ability to record ECochG. The specific hypotheses tested were threefold: (a) deterioration in the pure-tone average of low-frequency hearing at the first postoperative follow-up interval (follow-up visit 1 [FUV1], 4 to 6 weeks) will be associated with compromise of the cochlear microphonic (CM) amplitude during electrode insertion (primary hypothesis); (b) an association is observed at the second postoperative follow-up interval (FUV2, 3 months) (secondary hypothesis 1); and (c) the CM response will be recorded earlier during electrode array insertion when the preoperative high-frequency hearing is better (secondary hypothesis 2). DESIGN: International, multi-site prospective, observational, between groups design, targeting 41 adult participants in each of two groups, (compromised CM versus preserved CM). Adult CI candidates who were scheduled to receive a Cochlear Nucleus CI with a Slim Straight or a Slim Modiolar electrode array and had a preoperative audiometric low-frequency average thresholds of ≤80 dB HL at 500, 750, and 1000 Hz in the ear to be implanted, were recruited from eight international implant sites. Pure tone audiometry was measured preoperatively and at postoperative visits (FUV1 and follow-up visit 2 [FUV2]). ECochG was measured during and immediately after the implantation of the array. RESULTS: From a total of 78 enrolled individu

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1397534815
Document Type :
Electronic Resource