Abstract

The probability of system failures increases as the number of cochlear implants increases throughout the world. Whether a malfunction is a technical or physiological problem remains to be defined, particularly in very young children, while a psychogenic hearing disorder after implantation must not be excluded in adults. The battery of objective measurements used clinically at the Medizinische Hochschule, Hannover has provided useful diagnostic information for distinguishing possible causes of failure. In a normally functioning device, an electrical signal equivalent to the biphasic rectangular stimulation pulse can be recorded by measuring skin potentials from surface electrodes placed on the mastoid of the implant side and the forehead. The signal from the stimulated implanted electrodes is derived by applying a constant pulse rate. Signal averaging is not necessary. If no signals are observed, a non-functioning device should be suspected. If the device works normally, function of the auditory pathways can be examined by recording the electrically elicited stapedius reflex or electrically evoked brain-stem responses. In our experience with more than 450 cochlear implant patients, eight internal device failures occurred, while an additional three patients had either reduced or no hearing sensations due to a disorder of the auditory pathways.

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