Study looks at benefits of 2 cochlear implants in
deaf children
Editor: You may have noticed that bilateral cochlear implants are
becoming more common. It's taken awhile, but research is revealing that
two implants are generally better than one. Here's one such study from
the University of Wisconsin.
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Nature has outfitted us with a pair of ears for good reason: having
two ears enhances hearing. University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists
are now examining whether this is also true for the growing numbers of
deaf children who've received not one, but two, cochlear implants to
help them hear.
Led by Ruth Litovsky, an investigator in the UW-Madison Waisman
Center, the team's research suggests that deaf children who have a
cochlear implant in each ear more accurately locate sounds when they use
both implants instead of one. Children with two implants also become
more skilled at localizing sound over time.
The results were presented today (Feb. 13) at the Annual Midwinter
Meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology.
Information like this can be useful, says Litovsky, when doctors and
parents are deciding whether a child should get one or two of the
electronic devices, which allow deaf people to hear by bypassing the
damaged inner ear, or cochlea, to stimulate the auditory nerve directly.
It's not a simple choice. A single implant and the required surgery
can cost $50,000. The device also permanently damages the cochlea, which
might prevent recipients from taking advantage of potentially superior
treatments for deafness down the road.
Patients never received more than one implant until about ten years
ago. Then, doctors began to fit people with two, hoping this would
assist them in understanding speech, especially in "cocktail
party" environments with lots of competing sounds. "But there
are still many remaining questions about the actual extent of the
benefits of having two cochlear implants," Litovsky says.
Only about three percent of the 100,000 people worldwide who
currently wear implants have received two, she estimates.
Litovsky is an expert in binaural hearing, or hearing with two ears.
"We try to understand how having two ears is helpful," she
says. One main benefit: two ears make it easier to locate sounds.
"If you close an ear, walk around and try to identify where sounds
are coming from, it's very, very hard," she says.
To test whether a pair of cochlear implants aids this ability,
Litovsky's team has, to date, studied 55 deaf children who received a
second implant one to seven years after being fitted with their first.
When the research began, it appeared the group of 5 to 14 year-olds
couldn't localize sounds at all, Litovsky says. The result prompted her
to launch a longitudinal study designed not only to test their prowess
at this task, but also how it changed over time.
In the "listening game" she has devised with her team,
children face a semicircle of loudspeakers arranged at regular
intervals, each with a picture attached. When speech or other kinds of
sounds emit from a speaker, the children are scored on their ability to
identify the correct one by pointing to its picture.
In addition to completing the task while wearing both implants, the
children were asked to remove the microphone and other external parts of
one, rendering them deaf again in that ear.
"That turns out to be an interesting experience, because they
don't like to remove an implant," says Litovsky. "We have to
barter for that, with M&Ms or something else that motivates
them."
Although variability existed among the children, the study indicates
that most did develop the ability to locate speech and other sounds more
accurately when using two cochlear implants versus one. This capability
also increased with experience. "We're now seeing that the ability
to localize sounds takes time to emerge," says Litovsky. "What
seems to get better is the integration of the information from the two
ears in the brain."
Another crucial question is whether children should receive both
implants simultaneously, at the same time, or sequentially, at different
times, she says. The study's results have implications here, as well.
"The children we're looking at received their implants
sequentially," says Litovsky, "and we think that their brains
took a very long time to combine the inputs from the two ears."
Yet, the fact they learned to do so points to the brain's adaptability,
or "plasticity," she adds. "It reveals that the brain is
still open to input from an ear that was deaf for a very long
time."
Litovsky emphasizes that her goal is not to tell parents or doctors
whether two implants are better for children, but to work with families
who have made that choice and study the outcomes.
"I think so far our work has helped inform clinicians about
these decisions," she says. "So I hope in the future we'll be
able to continue to do that." Litovsky's research is funded by the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.