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Cochlear implantation in children younger than 2 years old
Waltzman SB; Cohen NL
OBJECTIVE: To determine the viability of giving implants to children <2 years old and to assess the development of speech perception. STUDY DESIGN: A prospective study with a follow-up period of 1-5 years. SETTING: New York University Medical Center. PATIENTS: The patients consisted of 11 consecutive profoundly deaf children, aged 14-23 months, who were given the Nucleus cochlear implant. METHODS: Closed- and open-set speech perception were assessed preoperatively and postoperatively using the following measures: Early Speech Perception (ESP) test, the Northwestern University children's perception of speech test (NU-CHIPS), the Glendonald auditory screening procedure (GASP) word and sentence tests, the phonetically balanced kindergarten (PBK) word test, common phrases test, the multisyllabic lexical neighborhood test (MLNT), and the lexical neighborhood test (LNT). RESULTS: Paired t test was used to examine changes in scores from the preoperative test interval to the last available postoperative assessment. Results indicate that all patients had significant improvement from preoperative performance to the last postoperative evaluation and were using oral language as their means of communication. There were no medical or surgical complications. CONCLUSIONS: Children <2 years old receive substantial benefit from a multichannel cochlear implant with no increase in risk when compared with older children
PMID: 9520051
ISSN: 0192-9763
CID: 12150
Results of speech processor upgrade in a population of Veterans Affairs cochlear implant recipients
Cohen NL; Waltzman SB; Roland JT Jr; Bromberg B; Cambron N; Gibbs L; Parkinson W; Snead C
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the change in performance when the Speak processing strategy replaced the Mpeak strategy. SUBJECTS: Twenty-one veterans who participated in the original Department of Veterans Affairs Multicenter Cochlear Implant Study, received the Nucleus F0F1F2 processor (Cochlear Corp., Englewood, CO, U.S.A.) (WSP) and were subsequently upgraded to the Mpeak (MSP) processing strategy. METHODS: Closed- and open-set speech recognition in quiet and in noise in auditory only conditions at the phoneme, word, and sentence levels were evaluated. RESULTS: Changes in audiologic parameters were evaluated using a paired t-test for related samples. Statistically significant improvements in mean scores were found for all tests and were greatest for the speech-in-noise conditions. An examination of individual data revealed that 61% of the subjects improved for tests administered in quiet, whereas up to 69% of the subjects had improved performance in noise. Subjects with no open set speech discrimination using the Mpeak strategy showed no improvement with the Speak strategy. CONCLUSIONS: Cochlear implants can provide improved performance using modifications to external speech processor hardware and software without changing the internal implant
PMID: 9233486
ISSN: 0192-9763
CID: 12307
Open-set speech perception in congenitally deaf children using cochlear implants
Waltzman SB; Cohen NL; Gomolin RH; Green JE; Shapiro WH; Hoffman RA; Roland JT Jr
OBJECTIVE: To assess and document the development of open-set speech recognition in congenitally deaf children implanted with the Nucleus multichannel cochlear prosthesis at < 5 years of age. STUDY DESIGN: The study group consisted of 38 consecutively chosen children in whom the decision to proceed with implantation had already been made. PATIENTS AND SETTING: Congenitally profoundly deaf children were implanted with the Nucleus multichannel cochlear implant at < 5 years of age and followed at NYU Medical Center for a period of 1-5 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Open-set speech perception was evaluated preoperatively and postoperatively using the following: the Glendonald Auditory Screening Procedure (GASP) word subset, the GASP sentence subtest, Phonetically Balanced Kindergarten monosyllabic word lists, Common Phrases test, Multisyllabic Lexical Neighborhood test, and Lexical Neighborhood test. RESULTS: Correlation coefficients were calculated between scores at each interval and age at implantation; one-way analyses of variance were performed independently. Results showed that all subjects had significant open-set speech recognition at the time of the last postoperative evaluation. Thirty-seven of the children use oral language as their sole means of communication. CONCLUSIONS: Multichannel cochlear implants provide significant and usable open-set speech perception in congenitally deaf children given implants at < 5 years of age
PMID: 9149829
ISSN: 0192-9763
CID: 12321
Cochlear implantation in children with cochlear malformations
Hoffman RA; Downey LL; Waltzman SB; Cohen NL
OBJECTIVE: To address the surgical and habilitative issues raised by cochlear implantation in children with cochlear dysplasia. STUDY DESIGN: The English-language literature is reviewed and the New York University Medical Center experience with three patients is detailed. Two hundred institutions performing cochlear implants were queried by questionnaire. SETTING: Hospitals performing cochlear implantation. PATIENTS: Pediatric patients with a cochlear implant in an ear with a dysplastic cochlea. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Preoperative computed tomography analysis of cochlear anatomy was compared with operative findings, complications, and postoperative device use. RESULTS: Facial nerve anatomy was anomalous in 16% of patients, and there were two surgical injuries. There were no cases of meningitis. All patients who received multichannel implants derive benefit and wear their devices. CONCLUSIONS: All degrees of cochlear dysplasia, ranging from incomplete partition to common cavity, can be safely implanted and auditory responses expected
PMID: 9093675
ISSN: 0192-9763
CID: 7165
Perception and production results in children implanted between 2 and 5 years of age
Waltzman S; Cohen NL; Gomolin R; Green J; Shapiro W; Brackett D; Zara C
PMID: 9042482
ISSN: 0065-3071
CID: 12419
Changes in electrical thresholds over time in young children implanted with the Nucleus cochlear prosthesis
Shapiro W; Waltzman S
PMID: 7668624
ISSN: 0096-8056
CID: 6866
Effects of short-term deafness in young children implanted with the Nucleus cochlear prosthesis
Waltzman S; Cohen N; Gomolin R; Ozdamar S; Shapiro W; Hoffman R
PMID: 7668698
ISSN: 0096-8056
CID: 6873
Postoperative imaging of the multichannel cochlear implant
Shpizner BA; Holliday RA; Roland JT; Cohen NL; Waltzman SB; Shapiro WH
PURPOSE: To present the postoperative radiographic appearance of the multichannel cochlear implant and to suggest criteria for the radiographic evaluation of postimplant patients. METHODS: One hundred forty-one patients, 73 female and 68 male, had multichannel cochlear implants inserted. One hundred thirty-five intraoperative radiographs, 31 postoperative radiographic examinations, and 10 postoperative CT examinations were retrospectively reviewed. RESULTS: In 135 patients, a Stenver's or anteroposterior projection confirmed the normal placement of the implant by demonstrating the electrodes to be regularly spaced and gently curved within the first turn of the cochlea. The insertion depth was determined by counting the number of electrodes that projected medial to the cochlear promontory. In 5 patients in whom intracochlear placement of the electrode array could not be confirmed on plain radiographs, CT demonstrated the location of the electrode array. In 3 patients with postoperative infections, CT either correctly identified or excluded the presence of a collection beneath the implant. CONCLUSION: Plain radiographs of the temporal bone are sufficient for the postoperative treatment of the majority of postimplant patients. CT should be performed when plain radiographs cannot adequately show the location of the electrode array or if postoperative infection is suspected
PMID: 7484646
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 6867
Influence of processing strategies on cochlear implant performance
Cohen NL; Waltzman SB
The development of new processing strategies has allowed for the improvement of auditory skills in cochlear implant recipients. This study examines the effects of a change in processing strategy on the individual recipients of the Nucleus cochlear prosthesis. Twenty-five subjects who had used the F0F1F2 processing strategy (WSP III) for 2 years were switched to the MPeak strategy (MSP) and retested immediately and after 3 months. Results revealed an improvement in speech recognition ability with the MPeak strategy in those subjects who were able to perceive speech with the F0F1F2 processing strategy
PMID: 7717634
ISSN: 0096-8056
CID: 12790
Predictors of postoperative performance with cochlear implants
Waltzman SB; Fisher SG; Niparko JK; Cohen NL
One objective of the Department of Veterans Affairs study: A Prospective Randomized Study of Advanced Cochlear Implants was to attempt to identify preoperative patient characteristics that might predict postoperative performance. We studied the relationship between all preoperative factors and the 2-year postoperative performance on 24 audiological tests for 82 patients who were implanted with the Ineraid, Nucleus, or 3M/Vienna device. Results of the univariate analysis indicated that computed tomographic findings of the cochlea and round window, IQ, age at implantation, length of deafness, profound deafness, and lipreading ability weakly correlated to postoperative performance. The multivariate analysis showed age at time of implantation, IQ, and lipreading ability to be predictive of postoperative performance
PMID: 7717629
ISSN: 0096-8056
CID: 12791