Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The purpose of this investigation is to determine the safety and preliminary efficacy of implanting a cochlear implant (CI) in the profoundly deaf ear of an adult with one normal hearing (NH) ear (termed "single-sided deaf" person, or SSD). The potential subjects will have been deafened post-lingually, thus, at one point the now deafened ear did conduct sound from the periphery. The MED-EL CI system will be implanted in ten (10) SSD patients.The long-term goal of this research program is to determine whether the CI, in combination with the NH ear, may provide improved localization ability and better speech understanding in noise, relative to performance before cochlear implantation (i.e., with the NH ear alone). A secondary long-term goal is to determine whether CI stimulation may reduce tinnitus severity, compared to tinnitus experienced prior to cochlear implantation or when the CI is turned off, after implantation.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Is an adult (18 years of age or older)
English as the primary language
Able to undergo general anesthesia, as determined by physical examination and written report from the physician
Receives pneumovax vaccine within 2 weeks of surgery and provides documentation to the principal investigator
Profoundly/severely deaf in one ear ("implant ear"), as defined by:
Normal hearing in one ear ("non-implant ear"), as defined by:
Provides informed consent
Willing and able to follow the study protocol
Exclusion criteria
Retrocochlear pathology resulting from Neurofibromatosis 2, or other types of cranial nerve/brainstem tumors
Co-existing medical conditions that require radiotherapy of the brainstem and/or auditory cortex
Any medical contraindication precluding safe administration of general anesthesia, e.g.,
Otologic conditions which contraindicate surgery
Anatomic abnormalities detected on CT preventing appropriate placement of the stimulator housing in the bone of the skull or placement of the electrode array in the cochlea (e.g., ossification)
Psychological conditions contraindicating surgery
Skin or scalp conditions that may preclude attachment of the coil or that may interfere with the use of the coil
Chronic pain in or around the head
Current or previous use of an active hearing implant (e.g., bone-anchored hearing aids, cochlear implant, etc.)
Developmental delays or organic brain dysfunction
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal