Clinical trials with a 22‐channel cochlear prosthesis
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 95 (12) , 1448-1454
- https://doi.org/10.1288/00005537-198512000-00003
Abstract
During 1984, six patients have been implanted with a 22-channel cochlear prosthesis. The device features a programmable wearable speech processor using a speech feature encoding strategy. A strict clinical protocol was followed, and no patients have been lost to follow-up. All patients are regular users of the device and have shown a restoration of hearing sensation in response to acoustic stimuli. Pure tone averages ranged from 20 to 47 dB HL and speech detection thresholds varied from 15 to 32.5 dB HL. All patients have shown a recognition of a large variety of environmental sounds, and an improvement in speech recognition ability when the device is used in conjunction with lipreading. Speech reception thresholds using spondee words without lipreading were obtained in three patients at levels of 27.5 to 55 dB HL and one patient had an open-set speech discrimination score (w-22 word list) of 42% without lipreading. In addition, two of the patients show an ability to have limited interactive conversation without the use of lipreading.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- A multi-channel hearing prosthesis for profound-to-total hearing lossJournal of Medical Engineering & Technology, 1984
- Clinical trial of a multiple‐channel cochlear prosthesis: An initial study in four patients with profound total hearing lossThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1983
- A method for training and evaluating the reception of ongoing speechThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1978