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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Hybrid 10 clinical trial: preliminary results.

TLDR
The data suggest that, in general, the advantages gained for speech recognition in noise by preserving residual hearing exist, unless the hearing loss approaches profound levels.
Abstract
Acoustic plus electric (electric-acoustic) speech processing has been successful in highlighting the important role of articulation information in consonant recognition in those adults that have profound high-frequency hearing loss at frequencies greater than 1500 Hz and less than 60% discrimination scores. Eighty-seven subjects were enrolled in an adult Hybrid multicenter Food and Drug Administration clinical trial. Immediate hearing preservation was accomplished in 85/87 subjects. Over time (3 months to 5 years), some hearing preservation was maintained in 91% of the group. Combined electric-acoustic processing enabled most of this group of volunteers to gain improved speech understanding, compared to their preoperative hearing, with bilateral hearing aids. Most have preservation of low-frequency acoustic hearing within 15 dB of their preoperative pure tone levels. Those with greater losses (>30 dB) also benefited from the combination of electric-acoustic speech processing. Postoperatively, in the electric-acoustic processing condition, loss of low-frequency hearing did not correlate with improvements in speech perception scores in quiet. Sixteen subjects were identified as poor performers in that they did not achieve a significant improvement through electric-acoustic processing. A multiple regression analysis determined that 91% of the variance in the poorly performing group can be explained by the preoperative speech recognition score and duration of deafness. Signal-to-noise ratios for speech understanding in noise improved more than 9 dB in some individuals in the electric-acoustic processing condition. The relation between speech understanding in noise thresholds and residual low-frequency acoustic hearing is significant (r = 0.62; p < 0.05). The data suggest that, in general, the advantages gained for speech recognition in noise by preserving residual hearing exist, unless the hearing loss approaches profound levels. Preservation of residual low-frequency hearing should be considered when expanding candidate selection criteria for standard cochlear implants. Duration of profound high-frequency hearing loss appears to be an important variable when determining selection criteria for the Hybrid implant.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Combining acoustic and electrical hearing

TL;DR: The human ear has the capability to integrate both acoustic and high‐frequency electrically processed speech information and such a device can provide a substantial benefit in speech understanding to individuals with severe high‐ frequencies hearing loss, while still maintaining the benefits of the residual lower‐frequency acoustic hearing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of Minimizing Trauma During Conventional Cochlear Implantation

TL;DR: These findings support the use of minimally traumatic techniques in all CI recipients, even those destined for electric-only stimulation, and allow for conservation of some residual hearing in more than 50% of patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cochlear implantation with hearing preservation yields significant benefit for speech recognition in complex listening environments

TL;DR: It is suggested that preserved low-frequency hearing improves speech understanding for CI recipients, and testing in complex listening environments, in which binaural timing cues differ for signal and noise, may best demonstrate the value of having two ears with low- frequencies.
Book

Electric-Acoustic Stimulation of the Auditory System: A Review of the First Decade

TL;DR: This paper summarizes the history of EAS and acknowledges the tremendous work of the many research groups who contributed to the success of Eas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a consensus on a hearing preservation classification system.

TL;DR: The Hearing Preservation Classification System proposed herein fulfills the following necessary criteria: 1) classification is independent from users' initial hearing, 2) it is appropriate for all cochlear implant users with measurable pre-operative residual hearing, 3) it covers the whole range of pure tone average from 0 to 120 dB; and it is easy to use and easy to understand.
References
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Proceedings Article

Information Theory and an Extention of the Maximum Likelihood Principle

H. Akaike
TL;DR: The classical maximum likelihood principle can be considered to be a method of asymptotic realization of an optimum estimate with respect to a very general information theoretic criterion to provide answers to many practical problems of statistical model fitting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single-neuron labeling and chronic cochlear pathology. III. Stereocilia damage and alterations of threshold tuning curves

TL;DR: The correlations between structural and functional changes suggest that a normal tuning-curve tip requires that the stereocilia on both the IHCs and OHCs (especially those from the first row) be normal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electric-acoustic stimulation of the auditory system. New technology for severe hearing loss.

TL;DR: For the first time, animal data have been collected that indicate the possibility of nearly interference-free use of both stimulation types simultaneously simultaneously, and the first clinical patient experience is gathered, which confirms the encouraging results.
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