Characteristics of malfunctioning channels in pediatric cochlear implants
β Scribed by Jerry W. Lin; Avni Mody; Ross Tonini; Claudia Emery; Jody Haymond; Jeffrey T. Vrabec; John S. Oghalai
- Book ID
- 102450124
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 219 KB
- Volume
- 120
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0023-852X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objectives/Hypothesis:
To examine the characteristics of pediatric cochlear implant channel malfunction preceding device failure.
Study Design:
Retrospective review.
Methods:
All pediatric patients who underwent cochlear implantation at a tertiary academic medical center were reviewed regarding device type, reason for replacement, time to replacement, and timing and pattern of channel faults in failed versus nonfailed devices.
Results:
Between 1993 and 2008, 264 pediatric cochlear implantations were performed. With an average 894βday followβup, the replacement rate was 9.5% (25/264). Reasons for replacement were device failure (6.4%), medical/surgical failure (2.3%), and obsolescence (0.8%). Replacement rates were comparable among Advanced Bionics (13.3%), Cochlear Corporation (6.3%), and MEDβEL (10.3%) devices. Fiftyβtwo cochlear implants developed at least one channel fault, and 13 eventually progressed to failure requiring replacement. MEDβEL devices comprised 12 of these 13 failures. At the 12βmonth followβup interval, one, three, and five channel faults predicted 40%, 75%, and 100% probabilities of eventual electrode failure, respectively. Channels destined to fail demonstrated small, yet statistically significant, impedance elevations 12 months before failure and large elevations 3 months before failure.
Conclusions:
Replacement of cochlear implants in pediatric patients is common and is due to device malfunction about one half of the time. Earlier initial channel fault, earlier subsequent channel faults, adjacent channel faults, and a greater total number of channel faults were associated with the need for replacement surgery. Elevations in a channel's impedance should raise the concern for an impending failure. These predictors can help the cochlear implant team when considering surgery to replace the device. Laryngoscope, 2010
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