Abstract

AimThe aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of cochlear reimplantation (CR) on hearing performance in children and adults with severe to profound hearing loss. Material and MethodsRetrospective observational study. ObjectivesThe main objective of this study was to determine whether there was a difference in hearing performance before and after CR. Secondary objectives were to analyze reasons for CR; to assess correlations between auditory performance and complete electrode reinsertion during CR, age, gender, explantation-to-CR interval, and interval between first implantation and CR; and to assess difference in APCEI score and the French evaluation protocol for implanted patients before and after CR. ResultsComparison of speech perception scores before and after explantation-reimplantation showed no significant difference (P>0.005) at 1 year or at 2 years after CR. In 80% of cases, reimplantation was due to hard implant failure. In other cases, it was undertaken for soft failure (diminished performance but no abnormalities on integrity testing) (8%), medical reasons (6%), or undetermined reasons (6%). There was no significant correlation between auditory performance at 1 or 2 years and complete or incomplete reinsertion of electrodes, age, gender, explantation-to-CR interval, or interval between first implantation and CR (P>0.005). For the adult subgroup, the French evaluation protocol scores did not differ after reimplantation (P=0.62). Likewise, for the child sub-group, APCEI and CAP results did not deteriorate after reimplantation. ConclusionReimplantation had no negative impact on hearing and speech perception, but provided performance equivalent to or better than after initial implantation.

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