Abstract

To characterize the relationship between cochlear duct length (CDL) and initial hearing preservation among cochlear implant recipients of a fully inserted 31.5 mm flexible lateral wall electrode array. Retrospective review. Tertiary academic referral center. Adult cochlear implant recipients who presented preoperatively with unaided hearing detection thresholds of ≤ 65 dB HL at 125 Hz and underwent cochlear implantation with a 31.5 mm flexible lateral wall array. Cochlear implantation with a hearing preservation surgical approach. Computed tomography was reviewed to determine CDL. Hearing preservation was characterized by the shift in low-frequency pure-tone average (LFPTA; 125, 250, and 500 Hz), and shift in individual unaided hearing detection thresholds at 125, 250, and 500 Hz. Nineteen patients met the criteria for inclusion. The mean CDL was 34.2 mm (range: 30.8-36.5 mm). Recipients experienced a mean LFPTA shift of 27.6 dB HL (range: 10-50 dB HL). Significant, negative correlations were observed between CDL and smaller threshold shifts at individual frequencies and LFPTA (p ≤ 0.048). A longer CDL is associated with greater likelihood of preserving low-frequency hearing with long arrays. Low-frequency hearing preservation is feasible with fully inserted long flexible arrays within the initial months after cochlear implantation. Preoperative measurement of CDL may facilitate a more individualized approach in array selection to permit optimal cochlear coverage while enhancing hearing preservation outcomes.

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