The Merits of Bilateral Application of Middle Ear Implants in Patients With Bilateral Conductive and/or Mixed Hearing Loss

Martijn J.H. Agterberg*, Louise Straatman, Karl Ludwig Bruchhage, Tim Jürgens, Daniela Hollfelder, Anke Leichtle

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

This study investigated sound localization abilities in patients with bilateral conductive and/or mixed hearing loss (BCHL) when listening with either one or two middle ear implants (MEIs). Sound localization was measured by asking patients to point as quickly and accurately as possible with a head-mounted LED in the perceived sound direction. Loudspeakers, positioned around the listener within a range of +73°/−73° in the horizontal plane, were not visible to the patients. Broadband (500 Hz–20 kHz) noise bursts (150 ms), roved over a 20-dB range in 10 dB steps was presented. MEIs stimulate the ipsilateral cochlea only and therefore the localization response was not affected by crosstalk. Sound localization was better with bilateral MEIs compared with the unilateral left and unilateral right conditions. Good sound localization performance was found in the bilaterally aided hearing condition in four patients. In two patients, localization abilities equaled normal hearing performance. Interestingly, in the unaided condition, when both devices were turned off, subjects could still localize the stimuli presented at the highest sound level. Comparison with data of patients implanted bilaterally with bone-conduction devices, demonstrated that localization abilities with MEIs were superior. The measurements demonstrate that patients with BCHL, using remnant binaural cues in the unaided condition, are able to process binaural cues when listening with bilateral MEIs. We conclude that implantation with two MEIs, each stimulating only the ipsilateral cochlea, without crosstalk to the contralateral cochlea, can result in good sound localization abilities, and that this topic needs further investigation.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages10
JournalTrends in Hearing
Volume28
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • bilateral conductive hearing loss
  • binaural hearing
  • middle ear implant
  • sound localization

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