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Σάββατο 2 Μαρτίου 2019

First Implant-Induced Changes in Rostral Brainstem Impair Second Implant Outcomes in Sequential Bilateral Cochlear Implant Children With Long Inter-Implant Delay

First Implant-Induced Changes in Rostral Brainstem Impair Second Implant Outcomes in Sequential Bilateral Cochlear Implant Children With Long Inter-Implant Delay: Hypothesis:

Long-term unilateral use of a cochlear implant (CI) induces abnormal maturation of the rostral brainstem innervating the contralateral ear.

Background:

In sequential bilateral CI children with long inter-implant delay, both sides of auditory cortices were dominantly activated by the first CI, but mechanisms of this abnormal development of the auditory system remain unclear.

Methods:

Fifteen sequential bilateral CI children with long delay (mean ± SD, 28.7 ± 12.1 mo) underwent electrically evoked auditory brainstem response (EABR) testing using each of the first and second CI (CI1 and CI2, respectively), immediately after the second implantation. CI1 and CI2 were implanted at age of 23.7 ± 9.6 and 53.1 ± 12.1 months (mean ± SD), respectively. Apical-to-basal difference in electrically evoked interwave III-V latencies (eIII-eV slope) which decreases with implant use was compared between the CI1 and CI2 sides. Their speech perception scores were evaluated 3 years after the second implantation.

Results:

eIII-eV slopes evoked by the CI2 showed less mature pattern than those by the CI1. This CI2 versus CI1 difference in eIII-eV slopes, however, reduced as the inter-implant delay was prolonged, suggesting CI1-induced maturation of the rostral brainstem innervating the second ear before the second implantation. The smaller CI2 versus CI1 difference in eIII-eV slopes at the second implantation was correlated to poorer outcomes using the CI2 than the CI1.

Conclusions:

In this population, long-term unilateral CI use induced re-organization of the rostral brainstem innervating the second ear, which affected hearing outcomes using the CI2. Evaluation of eIII-eV slopes at the second implantation may be useful to predict hearing outcomes with CI2.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Hiroshi Yamazaki, M.D., Ph.D., Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Osaka Red Cross Hospital, 5-30 Fudegasaki-cho, Tennouji-ku, Osaka 543-8555, Japan; E-mail: h_yamazaki@ent.kuhp.kyoto-u.ac.jp

This work supported by KAKENHI Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) JP17K11326 (H.Y.) and JP18K09392 (Y.N.).

No conflicts of interest is declared in this study.

Copyright © 2019 by Otology & Neurotology, Inc. Image copyright © 2010 Wolters Kluwer Health/Anatomical Chart Company


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