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International Hearing Society 60th Annual Convention & Expo September 15-17, 2011 The Importance of Binaural Hearing Theodore Mason, M.D. Springfield, Massachusetts September 17, 2011 Presentation Overview • • • • Definition of Terms Importance of Binaural Hearing Bilateral Hearing with Hearing Aids Implantable Hearing Solutions – Bimodal Hearing – Bilateral Hearing • Candidacy Criteria • Clinical Management • Summary Bimodal use is on the rise Rationale for bimodal fittings: • Expanding candidacy criteria • Improved CI technology/performance • Improved power aids w/ DSP + feedback cancellation Potential benefits: • Better hearing performance in background noise¹ • Music appreciation² 1. Tyler, R, et al. (2002) Patients utilizing a hearing aid and a cochlear implant: Speech perception and localization. Ear Hear, 23:98-105. 2. Sucher, C., McDermott, H. (2009) Bimodal stimulation: Benefits for Music Perception and Sound Quality. Coch Impl Intl, 10 (Suppl.1): 96-99. Bilateral is a consideration • 5% of adults who qualified for cochlear implantation and pursued treatment were bilaterally implanted 1 – Based upon internal data of three manufacturers – 36,398 pursued unilateral and 1,882 pursued bilateral 1. Peters et al (2010). Worldwide Trends in Bilateral Cochlear Implantation. Laryngoscope Supplement, 120; S17-S44. Definition of Terms A Few Terms Explained • Bilateral: Both ears • Bilateral cochlear implantation: CIs placed in each cochlea of an individual patient • Bimodal: Two different modes of stimulation • Bimodal Hearing/Bimodal Devices: CI in one ear, Hearing Aid (HA) on the other ear • Binaural Hearing/Binaural Processing*: Integration in the central auditory pathways of bilateral sound input * A CI and an optimally fitted HA on the non-implanted ear, two normally hearing ears, two hearing aids, or two CIs can provide binaural processing for some patients. A Few Terms Explained Bilateral Cochlear Implants Bimodal Binaural Hearing/ Processing Side One Side Two Cochlear Implant Cochlear Implant Cochlear Implant Hearing Aid Cochlear Implant or Hearing Aid may provide binaural processing Cochlear Implant or Hearing Aid may provide binaural processing *Binaural Hearing assumes processing of two signals throughout the central auditory system Cochlear Implant Candidacy Criteria Adult Candidacy Criteria • Adults: Individuals 18 years of age or older who have bilateral sensorineural hearing impairment and obtain limited benefit from appropriate binaural hearing aids. • These individuals typically have moderate to profound hearing loss in the low frequencies and profound (≥ 90 dB HL) hearing loss in the mid to high speech frequencies. • Limited benefit from amplification is defined by test scores of 50% correct or less in the ear to be implanted (60% or less in the bestaided listening condition) on tape-recorded tests of open set sentence recognition Evolution of Adult Candidacy Criteria 1985 1990 1998 (CI24M) 2000 (CI24R/CA ) to Current (CI512) ONSET of Postlinguistic Postlinguistic Pre & Hearing Loss Postlinguistic Pre & Postlinguistic DEGREE of SNHL Profound ADULT Open- 0% set sentences Profound Severe-Profound Moderate-to-profound -bilateral sensorineural hearing loss 0% 40% or less < 50% sentence recognition in ear to be implanted (aided) < 60% in contralateral ear and binaurally (aided) Adult Candidacy Criteria Audiometric candidacy ranges Moderate-to-profound SNHL in both ears Speech recognition criteria Limited benefit from amplification defined as preoperative test scores: <50% sentences in ear to be implanted <60% bilaterally (best aided condition) Medicare criteria differs slightly: ≤ 40% sentence recognition in the ear to be implanted (aided) Case Study 52 y.o. CI – Right Ear Pre-op Aided Scores* HINT 12% CUNY 19% CNC 0% Post CI Scores HINT 87% CUNY 92% CNC 78% A - best aided C - CI right ear *Performed in best aided condition Note: Left side is dead ear The Importance of Binaural Hearing What is Binaural Hearing? • Inputs from each ear travel up ipsilateral and contralateral brainstem pathways where the 2 inputs are compared and processed at various nuclei before reaching the auditory cortex. • Binaural hearing allows the listener to take advantage of a variety of auditory cues such as interaural level and time differences that result in specific benefits. Potential Benefits of Binaural Hearing • Improved speech perception in quiet and in noise, from: – Binaural redundancy/summation effects – Spatial separation (binaural squelch and head shadow effects) • Improved sound localization • Improved: – Ease of listening, – Perceived benefit and satisfaction – Quality of life Measured Effects of Binaural Hearing • Head Shadow Effect is a physical phenomenon – This occurs when the head obstructs sounds arriving at the ears from different locations. Binaural hearing allows the listener to always have available the ear with the better signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) • Binaural Redundancy and Binaural Squelch Effects are products of central auditory processing – These occur when inputs from both ears are analyzed throughout the auditory pathways – These are signs of the ability of the auditory nervous system to integrate, fuse, and use information from the two ears – In effect helps the brain “tease out” the desired auditory signal from the background noise Head Shadow Effect • Using the ear with the better SNR in spatially separated speech and noise • With one implant or hearing in only one ear in certain listening situations the implanted ear or hearing ear may have the less favorable SNR • Spatial separation benefits can occur from the head shadow effect and having 2 functioning cochleae Sound arrives later and softer Sound arrives earlier and louder Head Shadow Effect Speech Listening using the ear with the better SNR to improve performance Noise • Large and robust benefit of head shadow1 1. Litovsky et al (2006). Simultaneous bilateral implantation in adults: a multicenter clinical study. Ear Hear. 27(6):714-31. Binaural Redundancy Effect • Simply means two ears are better than one when speech or speech in noise are from the same location, because each ear receives the same input • Several studies have shown a significant binaural summation (redundancy) effect for understanding words and sentences compared to listening with either cochlear implant alone1,2 1. Litovsky, R, et al. (2006). Simultaneous bilateral cochlear implantation in adults: A multicenter clinical study. Ear Hear, 27(6), 714-731. 2. Dunn, C, et al. (2008). Comparison of speech recognition and localization performance in bilateral and unilateral cochlear implant users matched on duration of deafness and age at implantation. Ear Hear, 29(3): 352-359. Binaural Redundancy Effect • Auditory system’s ability to use redundant information for better performance when the same signal arrives at both ears • Difference between bilateral and better ear performance in spatially coincident speech, or speech and noise Speech and Noise Binaural Squelch Advantage of adding the ear with the poorer SNR compared to listening with the better SNR ear alone • Buss et al (2008) saw emergence of binaural Noise squelch effect in some subjects between the 6 and 12 mo test intervals, with a highly significant mean increase in magnitude of the advantage, Poorer SNR 1 from 3.3% to 10.6% Speech Better SNR 1. Buss, E, et al. (2008). Multicenter U.S. bilateral Med-El cochlear implantation study: Speech perception over the first year of use. Ear Hear, 29(1): 20–32. Bilateral Hearing with Hearing Aids Bilateral Hearing • Bilateral hearing refers to the ability to receive a signal on two sides, this can be achieved using: – Two normally hearing ears – Two hearing aids or Baha® devices – A cochlear implant and a hearing aid (bimodal hearing) – Two cochlear implants Bilateral Hearing with Hearing Aids • In 1990 Vanderbilt University and the Department of Veterans Affairs cosponsored a conference designed to address current clinical and research issues on hearing aids • Following the conference, a consensus statement was developed on hearing aid selection procedures for adults. • “Unless clear contraindications exist, binaural hearing aids should be considered the preferred fitting for the prospective hearing aid user.1” – Bilateral hearing aid fittings have been standard practice in the hearing aid industry for years! 1. Hawkins, DB et al. Vanderbilt/VA Hearing Aid Conference 1990 Consensus Statement. ASHA 1991, 37-38. Bilateral Hearing with Hearing Aids • • For patients with bilateral hearing loss, bilateral hearing aid fittings have been the standard practice for many years Reasons for bilateral hearing aid fittings include1: – Better understanding of speech – Better understanding in group and noisy situations – Better ability to tell the direction of sound – Better sound quality – Wider hearing range – Better sound identification – Keep both ears active resulting in potentially less hearing loss deterioration – Hearing is less tiring and listening more pleasant – Feeling of balanced hearing – Consumer preference – Customer satisfaction 1. As reported by the Better Hearing Institute, http://www.betterhearing.org/hearing_solutions/binaural.cfm?printfriendly=1 Determining the binaural hearing solution • We know that Two Ears ARE Better Than One – This may mean different things for different individuals. It could mean: • Using two hearing aids/Bahas® • Using a cochlear implant and a hearing aid • Using two cochlear implants How do you determine which scenario is best for each patient? Clinical Considerations Bimodal Hearing Aid & CI Bilateral CI Bilateral Hearing Aid Binaural Hearing Solution Unilateral Hearing Aid Unilateral Hearing Aid Why only one hearing solution? Implantable Hearing Solutions More potential for Bimodal users than you think • Severe to profound hearing loss in the US 8.4 million Hearing Aid (HA) users in U.S.1 8.4m ~840,000 severe to profound 2 (10%) 840k ~523,000 potential 523k cochlear implant candidates3 1. Kochkin, S. (2009) MarkeTrak VIII: 25 Year Trends in the Hearing Health Market. The Hearing Review, October. 2. Blanchfield, B.B., et. Al. (2001). The severely to profoundly hearing-impaired population in the United States: Prevalence estimates and demographics. JAAA. 12, 183-189. 3. Cochlear internal estimates. Bimodal versus Bilateral: Candidacy Considerations • Current status – Unanimous agreement by panel that bilateral implantation provided improved auditory perception in the majority of cases1 • When to consider bimodal devices?2 – Residual hearing in the non-implanted ear – Good HA performance in that ear – When there is any possibility of benefit • When to consider bilateral implantation? – Little or no residual hearing in non-implant ear – No significant benefit, or even a decrement in performance, from hearing aid use in the non-implant ear 1. Consensus on auditory implants. 2007. June 14-16, 2007, Marseille France. 2. Offeciers, E, et al. (2005). International consensus on bilateral cochlear implants and bimodal stimulation. Acta Oto-Laryngol, 125: 918-919. Bimodal Hearing: More Common Today • Broadened indications for implant candidacy: more individuals with potentially useable residual hearing – 80% (42 of 53) used bimodal hearing for >8 hours on average and all rated the bimodal condition superior to CI alone1 – 60% (15 of 24) of bimodal users report using hearing aid more than 50% of the time2 • Reviews of existing literature support fitting of a contralateral hearing aid as the first line of treatment to CI recipients with residual hearing3,4 1. 2. 3. 4. Cowan, R, Chin-Lenn,J. (2004). Pattern and prevalence of hearing aid use post implantation in adult cochlear implant users. Aust NZ J Audiol Suppl : 48. Fitzpatrick, et al. (2009). Users experience of a cochlear implant combined with a hearing aid. Intl J Audioloogy, 48, 172-182. Schafer EC et al. (2007). A meta-analytic comparison of binaural benefits between bilateral cochlear implants and bimodal stimulation. J Am Acad Audiol. Oct;18(9):760-76. Ching et al (2007). Binaural-Bimodal Fitting or Bilateral Implantation for Managing Severe to Profound Deafness: A Review. Trends in Amplification, Vol. 11, No. 3, 161-192 Potential Advantages of Bimodal Hearing1,2 • Localization and spatial hearing • Interaural time, intensity, phase differences at the 2 ears • Complimentary cues • Combining low-frequency information from the hearing aid with high-frequency information from the implant can help, for example by separating voices in noise • Sound quality, music perception and enjoyment • Improved quality by adding fundamental frequency, acoustic pitch and fine temporal structure not available through current cochlear implants 1. Ching et al (2007). Binaural-Bimodal Fitting or Bilateral Implantation for Managing Severe to Profound Deafness: A Review. Trends in Amplification, Vol. 11, No. 3, 161-192. 2. Fitzpatrick, et al. (2009). Users experience of a cochlear implant combined with a hearing aid. Intl J Audiology, 48, 172-182. Bimodal Speech Recognition • • • 1 19 Nucleus 24 recipients using a well-fit digital HA on the contralateral ear Test measures: roaming speech recognition task and localization – Stimuli: CNC words presented at a roving level of 60 dB SPL (+/- 3 dB), presented randomly from an array of 10 loudspeakers – Subjects cued with “ready” and allowed to turn toward the loud speaker prior to repeating the stimulus word – Localization: subject identified the loud speaker location by speaker number – Conditions: HA, CI and CI+HA Mean speech recognition results – HA = 12% words, 37% phonemes – CI = 39% words, 66% phonemes – CI+HA = 53% words, 76% phonemes – Conditions were significantly different from each other for both words and phonemes – No subject performed poorer with CI+HA than either monaural condition 1. Potts et al. (2009) Recognition and localization of speech by adult cochlear implant recipients wearing a digital hearing aid in the nonimplanted ear (bimodal hearing) J Am Acad Audiol. 2009 Jun;20(6):353-73. Case Study 36 y.o. CI Right Ear + HA Left Ear Pre-op best aided R L AU WRS % 0 32 36 HINT-Q* % 0 50 50 RCI LHA AU WRS % 80 32 dnt HINT-Q* % 92 48 100 HINT-N# CI+HA 80 dnt 100 Post-op (6 mos) *60dB SPL #+10/SNR dnt = did not test A – Aided SF C - CI right ear Bimodal Localization 1 • Localization abilities reported as RMS error – HA = 61° error – CI = 54° error – CI+HA = 39° error • CI+HA localization was significantly better than either monaural condition • The HA and CI conditions were not significantly different • Important to maximize audibility with HA through 2 kHz 1. Potts et al. (2009) Recognition and localization of speech by adult cochlear implant recipients wearing a digital hearing aid in the nonimplanted ear (bimodal hearing) J Am Acad Audiol. 2009 Jun;20(6):353-73. Bimodal Sound Quality and Music Perception • In general implant recipients perform poorly on tests of pitch perception and melody recognition1 • In a study of Music Perception in Nucleus® CI Users: – Bimodal users performed significantly better on all tests than those using only electrical stimulation2 • Comparison of CI and CI+HA on familiar melody recognition show the majority of recipients had significant improvements in the CI+HA condition3 – Some data suggesting amount of benefit is related to amount of contralateral residual hearing 1. Gfeller, K (2007). Accuracy of Cochlear Implant Recipients on Pitch Perception, Melody Recognition, and Speech Reception in Noise. Ear and Hearing; 28(3). 2. Cochlear Americas Multicenter Study on the Evaluation of the UW-CAMP Music Test, 2007 [data on file]. Lane Cove, Australia: Cochlear Ltd. 3. El Fata F et al. (2009). How much residual hearing is 'useful' for music perception with cochlear implants? Audiol Neurootol;14 Suppl 1:14-21. When to Move from Bimodal to Bilateral CIs? • Unilateral implant recipients who attempt but discontinue hearing aid use in the contralateral ear – <25% of 72 unilateral implant recipients with residual hearing (PTA <110 dB) used their hearing aid more than 50% of the time1 – 40% of implant recipients with a PTA of < 100 dB reported consistent hearing aid use 1 • Documented lack of improvement or a decrement in performance in the bimodal condition compared to the unilateral CI condition 1. Fitzpatrick, et al. (2009). Users experience of a cochlear implant combined with a hearing aid. Intl J Audioloogy, 48, 172-182. Trends with Binaural Hearing Solutions • Bimodal fitting recommendations are increasingly becoming the standard of care • For a small population, Bilateral implantation may be appropriate and is a growing trend 1. Tyler, R, et al. (2002) Patients utilizing a hearing aid and a cochlear implant: Speech perception and localization. Ear Hear, 23:98-105. 2. Sucher, C., McDermott, H. (2009) Bimodal stimulation: Benefits for Music Perception and Sound Quality. Coch Impl Intl, 10 (Suppl.1): 96-99. Adult Candidacy Considerations for CI’s • To ensure maximal potential for binaural processing, the most desirable candidates have1: – Post-lingual onset of hearing loss – Relatively short duration of profound hearing loss (e.g. less than 15 years), – or consistent and continued use of amplification in both ears up to implantation 1. Cochlear White Paper, Rationale for Bilateral Cochlear Implantation in Children and Adults. by B. Robert Peters, 2006. Bilateral Hearing with Cochlear Implants • The potential benefits of bilateral hearing with cochlear implants are much the same as bilateral hearing with hearing aids. • Benefits of bilateral cochlear implants may include: – Improved speech understanding in noise – Improved sound localization – Improved patient- perceived outcomes – Patient never without sound – Sound more balanced – Hearing speakers from both sides Demonstrated in numerous studies Improved Speech Recognition with 1 Bilateral Cochlear Implants • Study compared outcomes of 33 adults with bilateral CIs with 40 adults with unilateral CI • Improved speech recognition in quiet – On average: • Adults scored 19% higher on sentences • Adults scored 24% higher on words – Than did unilateral cochlear implant users 1. Dunn CC et al, (2008). Comparison of Speech Recognition and Location Performance in Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Matched on Duration of Deafness and Age at Implantation. Ear and Hearing. 29(3):352-359. Improved Speech Understanding in Noise with Bilateral Cochlear Implants • Data showing improvement in speech understanding in noise for some patients with bilateral cochlear implants were reported in the literature as early as 19881 • In research studies, improvement in speech understanding in noise is largely due to the head shadow effect, and to a lesser extent for some patients, the binaural squelch effect and the binaural redundancy effect2,3 • Improvements have been demonstrated in many recent studies in both adults and children2-4 1. Balkany T, Boggess W, Dinner B (1988). Binaural cochlear implantation: comparison of 3M/House and Nucleus 22 devices with evidence of sensory integration. Laryngoscope, Oct; 98(10): 1040-1043. 2. Litovsky, R et al. (2009) Spatial hearing and speech intelligibility in bilateral cochlear implant users. Ear and Hearing,30, 419-431. 3. Dunn, et al. (2010). Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Compared on Speech Perception in Noise. Ear & Hearing, 31(2), 296-298. 4. Johnston JC, et al. (2009). Bilateral paediatric cochlear implants: a critical review. Int J Audiol. 48(9):601-17. Improved Speech Understanding in Noise 1 with Bilateral Cochlear Implants • 15 bilateral subjects evaluated after 3 & 6 months experience • Speech recognition using BKB-SIN test – Speech at 65 dB SPL from a loudspeaker at 0 degrees (frontal) and noise from either 0 degrees or +/- 90 degrees (sides) – SNR for 50% correct determined when listening with each implant alone and while listening with both implants • Findings: – Significant benefit of listening with two ears in spatially separated speech in noise (defined as >3.1 dB advantage in the bilateral condition over unilateral conditions) – Benefit was greater after 6 months listening experience than after only 3 months listening experience 1. Litovsky, R et al. (2009). Spatial hearing and speech intelligibility in bilateral cochlear implant users. Ear and Hearing,30, 419-431. Improved Sound Localization with Bilateral Cochlear Implants • Improved sound localization with bilateral cochlear implants has been reported in the literature since the 1990s1 • Improvement in localization ability is due to integrating independent information from each ear throughout the auditory pathways • This ability has been demonstrated in multiple recent studies with cochlear implant recipientse.g.2,3 1. van Hoesel RJ, Clark, FM (1995). Fusion and lateralization study with two binaural cochlear implant patients. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol Suppl. Sep;166:233-5. 2. Dunn CC et al, Comparison of Speech Recognition and Localization Performance in Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Matched on Duration of Deafness and Age at Implantation. Ear and Hearing. 29(3):352-359, 2008. 3. Verschuur, CA, et al. (2005). Auditory Localization Abilities in Bilateral Cochlear Implant Recipients. Otology & Neurology, 26:965-971. Improved Localization with Bilateral 1 Cochlear Implants • Study compared outcomes of 33 adults with bilateral CI with 40 adults with unilateral CI • Findings: – Enhanced sound localization • Adults with bilateral cochlear implants had significantly more success identifying the location of sounds • Average localization precision was 25 degrees more accurate than unilateral subjects 1. Dunn CC et al, Comparison of Speech Recognition and Location Performance in Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Matched on Duration of Deafness and Age at Implantation. Ear and Hearing. 29(3):352-359, 2008. Improved Localization with Bilateral 1 Cochlear Implants With a second CI, precision in localizing sound more than doubles! Mean angular error: 1. Verschuur, CA, et al. (2005). Auditory Localization Abilities in Bilateral Cochlear Implant Recipients. Otology & Neurology, 26:965-971. Patient-Perceived Outcomes • Favorable patient-perceived outcomes with bilateral implants have been reported in the literature since 19921 • Improvements in self-perceived outcomes are likely due to increased performance outcomes and localization abilities • Positive bilateral outcomes have been demonstrated in multiple recent studies with cochlear implant recipients2,3 • Patient-perceived outcome data are based on selfassessment metrics and as a result, results can be variable 1. Green et al. (1992). Binaural cochlear implants. Am J Otol. 1992 Nov;13(6):502-6. 2. Litovsky et al. (2006). Simultaneous bilateral cochlear implantation in adults: A multicenter study. Ear & Hearing. 27(6): 714-731. 3. Noble et al. (2008). Hearing handicap ratings among different profiles of adult cochlear implant users. Ear & Hearing. 29(1): 112-120. Patient-Perceived Outcomes 1 • Retrospective study using factor analysis from two questionnaires – Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (HHIE) – Hearing Handicap Questionnaire (HHQ) • 35 bilateral recipients, 106 unilateral recipients, 42 with one cochlear implant and one hearing aid • Findings: – The least perceived handicap reported was by the bilateral implant group – Bilateral group also perceived significantly less handicap than the other groups on the Social Restriction subscores 1. Noble et al. (2008). Hearing handicap ratings among different profiles of adult cochlear implant users. Ear & Hearing. 29(1): 112-120. Patient-Perceived Outcomes • APHAB questionnaire data collected during a multi-center study of 37 simultaneously implanted adult cochlear implant users (using Nucleus 24) • First administered after a 3 week period during which bilateral CI recipients used only one implant (the better ear) then was re-administered after a period of using the bilateral implants again • Findings: – Subjects perceived their performance with the bilateral implants as significantly better than with a unilateral implant on the best-performing ear on all three communication subscales of the APHAB – No significant difference on the Aversiveness of Sounds subscale 1. Litovsky et al. (2006). Simultaneous bilateral cochlear implantation in adults: A multicenter study. Ear & Hearing. 27(6): 714-731. 1 Clinical Management Hearing Healthcare Team Hearing Healthcare Team Who’s on the Team? Hearing Healthcare Team Hearing Instrument Specialist Who’s on the Team? Hearing Healthcare Team ENT Physician Who’s on the Team? Hearing Healthcare Team Cochlear Implant Audiologist Who’s on the Team? Hearing Healthcare Team Patient Who’s on the Team? Hearing Healthcare Team ENT Physician Hearing Instrument Specialist Patient Cochlear Implant Audiologist Hearing Healthcare Team A Happy Patient Our Team • Dr Mason and partner physicians • In-office audiologists • Baystate Medical Center Cochlear Implant Program • Community audiologists and hearing instrument specialists • Patients! Clinical Management of the Bimodal Patient • All hearing healthcare professionals should feel comfortable in providing a bimodal hearing solution – With changing trends, it is very likely that you will continue to treat this patient population • Know a brief history… – When were they implanted – What is their ability – Overall satisfaction levels • Remember the following… – A unilateral cochlear implant patient has already met a best aided binaural speech discrimination score of <60% prior to cochlear implantation – Patient must have a bilateral severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss 6 Steps to a Bimodal Patient Step 1: Create 3 HA Programs Step 2: Match Loudness Step 3: Determine Preferred HA Program Step 4: Balance Loudness for CI + HA Step 5: Fine Tune the HA for Bilateral Comfort Step 6: Counsel on Continued HA Use Step 1: Create 3 HA Programs To start: Make sure the HA and CI are both ON • Program 1: Prescription of Choice • Program 2: Low Frequency Cut -6 dB/octave below 2k Hz • Program 3: Low Frequency Boost +6 dB/octave below 2k Hz Verify fit by using probe microphone. Step 2: Match Loudness To start: HA ON and CI OFF • Balance HA programs 2 and 3 to program 1 • Adjust the HA gain of programs 2 and 3 until the patient reports equal loudness when compared to program 1 • This is a task for loudness only Step 3: Preferred HA Program To start: HA ON and CI OFF • Have the patient listen to all 3 HA programs • Which program provides the best sound quality and/or speech understanding? • This becomes the “preferred” program Step 4: Balance Loudness To start: HA and CI OFF • Turn CI ON first, then turn HA ON – things may sound a bit loud • Point to the side where speech is loudest and adjust HA gain accordingly – If they point to CI, increase HA gain – If they point to HA, decrease HA gain • Aim for equal loudness between ears Step 5: Fine Tune for Comfort To start: Both HA and CI ON • Present recorded speech at 50 dB SPL – Adjust compression ratio/threshold to maintain equal loudness between HA and CI • Present recorded speech at 85 dB SPL – Adjust MPO to not exceed loudness discomfort levels Step 6: Counsel on HA Use • Counsel on the benefits of binaural hearing • Set appropriate expectations of speech understanding with the cochlear implant vs. the hearing aid • Discuss binaural assistive listening devices (i.e., HATIS) • Encourage a HA fine tuning appointment following every cochlear implant mapping session Summary Key Messages • TWO ears are better than ONE • Bilateral hearing aids are the standard of care • Bimodal hearing is an option for those who qualify for cochlear implantation • The potential benefits of hearing with bilateral cochlear implants are much the same as hearing with bilateral hearing aids. Thank you! Theodore Mason MD Ear, Nose & Throat Surgeons of Western New England www.entassociates.org www.cochlear.com Download presentation slides at www/ihsinfo.org/convention Questions?