CzMA JEP Home page CZECH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION J. Ev. PURKYNĚ
Journals - Article
CzMA JEP Home page News About Assocation Publishing Division Medical Journals Searching Supplements Catalogue
 
  Česky / Czech version Otorinolaryng. a Foniat. /Prague/, 56, 2007, No. 4, pp. 191–194.
 
Cochlear and Brainstem Implantation in Adult Patients - Results 
Černý L.1, Skřivan J.2 

Foniatrická klinika 1. LF UK a VFN, Praha, přednosta doc. MUDr. O. Dlouhá, CSc.1 Klinika ORL a chirurgie hlavy a krku 1. LF UK a FN Motol, Praha, přednosta prof. MUDr. J. Betka, DrSc.2
 


Summary:

       More than 100 adult patients were implanted in the Czech republic till now and the number has been growing rapidly in the last 6 years. The results of retrospective study of all adult patients (N=46, mean age 40.1 y.) implanted in our implant centre in years 2000-2004 and rehabilitated in 2001-2006 are presented. There were used both cochlear implant (N=43) and brainstem implant system (N=3) by Cochlear Nucleus type 22 and 24, all of them unilaterally. The aim of the study was to obtain an overview of results in correlation with pre-operative predictive factors as duration of severe hearing loss, lip-reading ability and age of patients. There were evaluated 100% of cases from the 5-year period. A detailed patient history was obtained, preoperative and post-operative examination by pure tone audiometry, lip-reading ability by a video-test, tests of speech understanding (open-set and closed-set word identification – CWA Czech Word Audiometry in a free field) and quality of life assessment (adapted from International Outcome Inventory). The results were obtained during periodical examinations (at least 1 year after the implantation). The results were compared in 4 groups: brainstem implant systems (N=3, mean age 32.3 y.), cochlear implants in long-term-progressive hearing loss (N=18, mean age 37.6 y., onset of severe hearing loss in childhood, well-developed-speaking patients only), cochlear implants in sudden deafness (N=14, mean age 43.6 y., duration of hearing loss under 5 years – due to meningitis, antibiotics, trauma) and cochlear implants in patients in older age (N 6, mean age 62.6 y., patients over 59 years only, both long-term-progressive and sudden deafness together). Based on our results we can see no risk of a worse post-operative performance in people older than 59 years (N=6, mean age 62.6 y.). There are better results in speech-understanding without lip-reading and subjective satisfaction than in other groups. Also the results of patients with long-term-progressive hearing loss (N=18, mean age 37.6 y.) are fully comparable with the mean results of all-cochlear-implanted group (N=43).

        Key words: cochlear implant, auditory brainstem implant, predictors, post-operative performance.
       

Order this issue

  BACK TO CONTENTS  
 
 
| HOME PAGE | CODE PAGE | CZECH VERSION |
©  1998 - 2008 CZECH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION J. E. PURKYNĚ
Created by: NT Servis, s.r.o., hosted by P.E.S. consulting, s.r.o.
WEBMASTER