Cochlear implantation in patients with Meniere's disease.

Publication/Presentation Date

7-1-2015

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Few studies have addressed the benefits of cochlear implantation for the small group of patients with bilateral, end-stage Meniere's disease, or unilateral disease with contralateral hearing loss from another cause. Our retrospective study evaluates the effectiveness and post-operative performance in these Meniere's disease patients and discusses these findings relative to other post-lingually deafened adults.

METHODS: Among 456 adults who received cochlear implants, we identified eight (1.7%) patients with Meniere's disease who met clinical indications for implantation and a control group of seven non-Meniere's patients of comparable age and deafness. Data gathered included demographics, auditory and vestibular symptoms pre-implantation, and clinical course after implantation, including audiometric scores (consonant-nucleus-consonant (CNC), hearing-in-noise testing (HINT), and AzBio score) and audiologic evaluations.

RESULTS: Comparing the Meniere's and non-Meniere's patients, pre- to post-implant scores averaged 15 and 16%-57 and 76% for CNC; and 4.5 and 40.5%-78 and 81% for AzBio and/or HINT tests, respectively; scores between groups did not statistically differ. Of note, five of eight patients had 0% word recognition scores pre-operatively. Fluctuations in CI performance were seen in five patients with Meniere's disease but not for those without the disease.

CONCLUSIONS: Audiologic testing found a strong likelihood that CIs did benefit our subset of Meniere's patients with severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss. Fluctuations in hearing sensitivity (perhaps owing to physical changes relative to the implant array with the spiral ganglion neurons during an acute attack or changes in spiral ganglion neurons because of the hydropic state) can often be resolved by subsequent reprogramming.

Volume

16

Issue

4

First Page

208

Last Page

212

ISSN

1754-7628

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

25490724

Department(s)

Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS