Cochlear Implantation in Cases of Asymmetric Hearing Loss: Subjective Benefit, Word Recognition, and Spatial Hearing

Author:

Dillon Margaret T.1ORCID,Buss Emily1,Rooth Meredith A.1,King English R.2,McCarthy Sarah A.2,Bucker Andrea L.2,Deres Ellen J.2,Richter Margaret E.3,Thompson Nicholas J.1,Canfarotta Michael W.1,O’Connell Brendan P.1,Pillsbury Harold C.1,Brown Kevin D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

2. Department of Audiology, UNC Health Care, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States

3. Division of Speech & Hearing Sciences, Department of Allied Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Abstract

A prospective clinical trial evaluated the effectiveness of cochlear implantation in adults with asymmetric hearing loss (AHL). Twenty subjects with mild-to-moderate hearing loss in the better ear and moderate-to-profound hearing loss in the poorer ear underwent cochlear implantation of the poorer hearing ear. Subjects were evaluated preoperatively and at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months post-activation. Preoperative performance was evaluated unaided, with traditional hearing aids (HAs) or with a bone-conduction HA. Post-activation performance was evaluated with the cochlear implant (CI) alone or in combination with a contralateral HA (bimodal). Test measures included subjective benefit, word recognition, and spatial hearing (i.e., localization and masked sentence recognition). Significant subjective benefit was reported as early as the 1-month interval, indicating better performance with the CI compared with the preferred preoperative condition. Aided word recognition with the CI alone was significantly improved at the 1-month interval compared with preoperative performance with an HA and continued to improve through the 12-month interval. Subjects demonstrated early, significant improvements in the bimodal condition on the spatial hearing tasks compared with baseline preoperative performance tested unaided. The magnitude of the benefit was reduced for subjects with AHL when compared with published data on CI users with normal hearing in the contralateral ear; this finding may reflect significant differences in age at implantation and hearing sensitivity across cohorts.

Funder

MED-EL Corporation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Otorhinolaryngology

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