Effects of Hearing Preservation on Psychophysical Responses to Cochlear Implant Stimulation

被引:58
|
作者
Kang, Stephen Y. [1 ]
Colesa, Deborah J. [1 ]
Swiderski, Donald L. [1 ]
Su, Gina L. [1 ]
Raphael, Yehoash [1 ]
Pfingst, Bryan E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Kresge Hearing Res Inst, Dept Otolaryngol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
electrical stimulation; residual hearing; auditory prosthesis; guinea pig; neomycin; hair cells; spiral ganglion; CHRONIC ELECTRICAL-STIMULATION; SPIRAL GANGLION NEURONS; AUDITORY-NERVE; GUINEA-PIG; ELECTROMOTILE HEARING; MORPHOLOGICAL-CHANGES; ACOUSTIC STIMULATION; MODULATION DETECTION; DETECTION THRESHOLDS; RESIDUAL HEARING;
D O I
10.1007/s10162-009-0194-7
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Previous studies have shown that residual acoustic hearing supplements cochlear implant function to improve speech recognition in noise as well as perception of music. The current study had two primary objectives. First, we sought to determine how cochlear implantation and electrical stimulation over a time period of 14 to 21 months influence cochlear structures such as hair cells and spiral ganglion neurons. Second, we sought to investigate whether the structures that provide acoustic hearing also affect the perception of electrical stimulation. We compared psychophysical responses to cochlear implant stimulation in two groups of adult guinea pigs. Group I (11 animals) received a cochlear implant in a previously untreated ear, while group II (ten animals) received a cochlear implant in an ear that had been previously infused with neomycin to destroy hearing. Psychophysical thresholds were measured in response to pulse-train and sinusoidal stimuli. Histological analysis of all group I animals and a subset of group II animals was performed. Nine of the 11 group I animals showed survival of the organ of Corti and spiral ganglion neurons adjacent to the electrode array. All group I animals showed survival of these elements in regions apical to the electrode array. Group II animals that were examined histologically showed complete loss of the organ of Corti in regions adjacent and apical to the electrode array and severe spiral ganglion neuron loss, consistent with previous reports for neomycin-treated ears. Behaviorally, group II animals had significantly lower thresholds than group I animals in response to 100 Hz sinusoidal stimuli. However, group I animals had significantly lower thresholds than group II animals in response to pulse-train stimuli (0.02 ms/phase; 156 to 5,000 pps). Additionally, the two groups showed distinct threshold versus pulse rate functions. We hypothesize that the differences in detection thresholds between groups are caused by the electrical activation of the hair cells in group I animals and/or differences between groups in the condition of the spiral ganglion neurons.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:245 / 265
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effects of Hearing Preservation on Psychophysical Responses to Cochlear Implant Stimulation
    Stephen Y. Kang
    Deborah J. Colesa
    Donald L. Swiderski
    Gina L. Su
    Yehoash Raphael
    Bryan E. Pfingst
    Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology, 2010, 11 : 245 - 265
  • [2] Hearing Preservation in Elderly Cochlear Implant Recipients
    Bourn, Stephanie
    Goldstein, Mary Rose
    Jacob, Abraham
    OTOLOGY & NEUROTOLOGY, 2020, 41 (05) : 618 - 624
  • [3] Toward hearing preservation in cochlear implant surgery
    Huarte, Raquel M.
    Roland, John T., Jr.
    CURRENT OPINION IN OTOLARYNGOLOGY & HEAD AND NECK SURGERY, 2014, 22 (05): : 349 - 352
  • [4] Advances in hearing preservation in cochlear implant surgery
    Tarabichi, Osama
    Jensen, Megan
    Hansen, Marlan R.
    CURRENT OPINION IN OTOLARYNGOLOGY & HEAD AND NECK SURGERY, 2021, 29 (05): : 385 - 390
  • [5] Hearing preservation with a hybrid cochlear implant (electro-acoustic stimulation) - case report
    Rebol, Janez
    ZDRAVNISKI VESTNIK-SLOVENIAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 82 (12): : 859 - 863
  • [6] Cochlear Implant Stimulation of a Hearing Ear Generates Separate Electrophonic and Electroneural Responses
    Sato, Mika
    Baumhoff, Peter
    Kral, Andrej
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2016, 36 (01): : 54 - 64
  • [7] Correlation of Scalar Cochlear Volume and Hearing Preservation in Cochlear Implant Recipients with Residual Hearing
    Raeth, Mareike
    Schurzig, Daniel
    Timm, Max E.
    Lenarz, Thomas
    Warnecke, Athanasia
    OTOLOGY & NEUROTOLOGY, 2024, 45 (03) : 256 - 265
  • [8] Feasibility of hearing preservation for residual hearing with longer cochlear implant electrodes
    Moteki, Hideaki
    Nishio, Shin-Ya
    Miyagawa, Maiko
    Tsukada, Keita
    Noguchi, Yoshihiro
    Usami, Shin-Ichi
    ACTA OTO-LARYNGOLOGICA, 2018, 138 (12) : 1080 - 1085
  • [9] EFFECTS OF STIMULATION BY COCHLEAR IMPLANT ON THE COCHLEAR NERVE
    TERR, LI
    SFOGLIANO, GA
    RILEY, SL
    LARYNGOSCOPE, 1989, 99 (11): : 1171 - 1174
  • [10] Effects of temporal fine structure preservation on spatial hearing in bilateral cochlear implant users
    Fischer, T.
    Schmid, C.
    Kompis, M.
    Mantokoudis, G.
    Caversaccio, M.
    Wimmer, W.
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2021, 150 (02): : 673 - 686