Abstract

BackgroundCochlear implants (CIs) are neural prostheses that have been used routinely in the clinic over the past 25 years. They allow children who were born profoundly deaf, as well as adults affected by hearing loss for whom conventional hearing aids are insufficient, to attain a functional level of hearing. The “modern” CI (i.e., a multi-electrode implant using sequential coding strategies) has yielded good speech comprehension outcomes (recognition level for monosyllabic words about 50% to 60%, and sentence comprehension close to 90%). These good average results however hide a very important interindividual variability as scores in a given patients’ population often vary from 5 to 95% in comparable testing conditions. Our aim was to develop a prognostic model for patients with unilateral CI. A novel method of objectively measuring electrical and neuronal interactions using electrical auditory brainstem responses (eABRs) is proposed.Methods and FindingsThe method consists of two measurements: 1) eABR measurements with stimulation by a single electrode at 70% of the dynamic range (four electrodes distributed within the cochlea were tested), followed by a summation of these four eABRs; 2) Measurement of a single eABR with stimulation from all four electrodes at 70% of the dynamic range. A comparison of the eABRs obtained by these two measurements, defined as the monaural interaction component (MIC), indicated electrical and neural interactions between the stimulation channels.Speech recognition performance without lip reading was measured for each patient using a logatome test (64 "vowel-consonant-vowel"; VCV; by forced choice of 1 out of 16). eABRs were measured in 16 CI patients (CIs with 20 electrodes, Digisonic SP; Oticon Medical ®, Vallauris, France).Significant correlations were found between speech recognition performance and the ratio of the amplitude of the V wave of the eABRs obtained with the two measurements (Pearson's linear regression model, parametric correlation: r2 = 0.26, p<0.05).ConclusionsThis prognostic model allowed a substantial amount of the interindividual variance in speech recognition scores to be explained. The present study used measurements of electrical and neuronal interactions by eABR to assess patients' bio-electric capacity to use multiple information channels supplied by the implant. This type of prognostic information may be valuable in several ways. On the patient level, it allows customizing of individual treatments.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01805167

Highlights

  • Cochlear implants (CI) represent a bona fide 20th century medical revolution

  • Good quality electrical auditory brainstem responses (eABRs) were obtained in most cases, with a clear wave V, while wave III could only be identified in 13/16 cases

  • The sum of the eABRs for individual stimulations was similar to the multi-electrode stimulation eABR and the observed monaural interaction component (MIC) was close to 1

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Summary

Introduction

Cochlear implants (CI) represent a bona fide 20th century medical revolution. Used in clinical practice since the 1990s, this technology has allowed functional hearing to be restored in individuals with severe to profound hearing loss [1,2]. The recognition level for monosyllabic words is approximately 50% to 60%, and sentence comprehension is close to 90% (after 12 month use, without lip reading) [4] These good average results hide a very important interindividual variability as scores in a given patients’ population often vary from 5 to 95% in comparable testing conditions. The “modern” CI (i.e., a multi-electrode implant using sequential coding strategies) has yielded good speech comprehension outcomes (recognition level for monosyllabic words about 50% to 60%, and sentence comprehension close to 90%) A novel method of objectively measuring electrical and neuronal interactions using electrical auditory brainstem responses (eABRs) is proposed

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