Abstract

To analyze the changes of cochlear nerve diameter and the presence of a cochlear nerve deficit at a high-frequency region and investigate their effects on cochlear implant (CI) performance in postlingual deaf adults. Retrospective. Tertiary care academic center. Eighty-three postlingual deaf adults with no labyrinthine anomalies or cognitive deficits who received a CI with perimodiolar electrodes from a single manufacturer. We evaluated the changes of cochlear nerve diameter and the presence of a "tail sign," defined as identifiable nerve fibers originating from the far basal turn of the cochlea, which represents the presence of cochlear nerve at a high-frequency region in magnetic resonance imaging, on monosyllabic word recognition scores. The cochlear nerve diameter showed a positive correlation with word recognition scores (maximum diameter, R2 = 0.26, p < 0.01; minimum diameter, R2 = 0.26, p < 0.01), but a negative correlation with deaf duration. Recipients with a positive tail sign performed better (73 ± 19%) than those without (45 ± 24%, p < 0.01). A positive tail sign was more commonly found in good performers (52 of 62, 84%) than in poor performers (5 of 21, 24%, p < 0.01). Favorable outcomes could be anticipated in postlingual deaf adults with a large cochlear nerve diameter and positive tail sign. A presence of cochlear nerve at a high-frequency region may be an imaging marker for predicting good CI performance.

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