Modified cochlear implant to treat balance disorder
October 2010
Success could spur new treatment approach for millions of people who
suffer vestibular problems A University of Washington Medical Center patient
on Thursday, Oct. 21, will be the world's first recipient of a device that
aims to quell the disabling vertigo associated with Meniere's disease.
The UW Medicine clinicians who developed the implantable device hope that
success in a 10-person surgical trial of Meniere's patients will lead to
exploration of its usefulness against other common balance disorders that
torment millions of people worldwide.
The device being tested - a cochlear implant and processor with
re-engineered software and electrode arrays - represents four-plus years of
work by Drs. Jay Rubinstein and James Phillips of UW's Department of
Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. They worked with Drs. Steven Bierer,
Albert Fuchs, Chris Kaneko, Leo Ling and Kaibao Nie, UW specialists in
signal processing, brainstem physiology and vestibular neural coding.
"What we're proposing here is a potentially safer and more effective
therapy than exists now," said Rubinstein, an ear surgeon and auditory
scientist who has earned a doctoral degree in bioengineering and who holds
multiple U.S. patents.
In the United States, Meniere's affects less than one percent of the
population. The disease occurs mostly in people between ages 30 and 50, but
can strike anyone. Patients more often experience the condition in one ear;
about 30 percent of cases are bilateral.
The disease affects hearing and balance with varying intensity and
frequency but can be extremely debilitating. Its episodic attacks are
thought to stem from the rupture of an inner-ear membrane. Endolymphatic
fluid leaks out of the vestibular system, causing havoc to the brain's
perception of balance.
To stave off nausea, afflicted people must lie still, typically for
several hours and sometimes up to half a day while the membrane self-repairs
and equilibrium is restored, said Phillips, a UW research associate
professor and director of the UW Dizziness and Balance Center. Because the
attacks come with scant warning, a Meniere's diagnosis can cause people to
change careers and curb their lifestyles.
Many patients respond to first-line treatments of medication and changes
to diet and activity. When those therapies fail to reduce the rate of
attacks, surgery is often an effective option but it typically is ablative
(destructive) in nature. In essence, the patient sacrifices function in the
affected ear to halt the vertigo - akin to a pilot who shuts down an erratic
engine during flight. Forever after, the person's balance and, often,
hearing are based on one ear's function.
With their device, Phillips and Rubinstein aim to restore the patient's
balance during attacks while leaving natural hearing and residual balance
function intact.
A patient wears a processor behind the affected ear and activates it as
an attack starts. The processor wirelessly signals the device, which is
implanted almost directly underneath in a small well created in the temporal
bone. The device in turn transmits electrical impulses through three
electrodes inserted into the canals of the inner ear's bony labyrinth.
"It's an override," Phillips said. "It doesn't change what's happening in
the ear, but it eliminates the symptoms while replacing the function of that
ear until it recovers."
The specific placement of the electrodes in the bony labyrinth is
determined by neuronal signal testing at the time of implant. The superior
semicircular canal, lateral semicircular canal and posterior semicircular
canal each receive one electrode array.
A National Institutes of Health grant funded the development of the
device and its initial testing at the Washington National Primate Research
Center. The promising results from those tests led the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, in June, to approve the device and the proposed surgical
implantation procedure. Shortly thereafter, the limited surgical trial in
humans won approval from the Western Institutional Review Board, an
independent body charged with protecting the safety of research subjects.
By basing their invention on cochlear implants whose design and surgical
implantation were already FDA-approved, Phillips and Rubinstein leapfrogged
scientists at other institutions who had begun years earlier but chosen to
develop novel prototypes.
"If you started from scratch, in a circumstance like this where no one
has ever treated a vestibular disorder with a device, it probably would take
10 years to develop such a device," Rubinstein said.
The device epitomizes the translational advancements pursued at UW's
academic medical centers, he said. He credited the team's skills and its
access to the primate center, whose labs facilitated the quick turnaround of
results that helped win the FDA's support.
A successful human trial could lead the implant to become the
first-choice surgical intervention for Meniere's patients, Phillips said,
and spark collaboration with other researchers who are studying more
widespread balance disorders.
The first patient will be a 56-year-old man from Yakima, Wash. He has
unilateral Meniere's disease and has been a patient of Rubinstein's for
about two years.