This article reports on four retrospective case studies in which parental behavioral management of the implanted child included withholding the cochlear implant or activities associated with it as a disciplinary measure or as a means of preventing device loss or damage. The need for parental counseling by health care and educational professionals as to the importance of a child's connection to the hearing world all day long through the implant for optimal speech, language, academic, and psychosocial development is emphasized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe tympanic membrane displacement (TMD) testing for non-invasive estimation of intracranial pressure (ICP). With the TMD test, displacement of the tympanic membrane of the middle ear is recorded during elicitation of the acoustic middle-ear reflex (AR). Increased intracranial/perilymphatic pressure displaces the resting stapes footplate laterally so that TMD during the acoustic reflex is medial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss has been treated with oral corticosteroids for more than 30 years. Recently, many patients' symptoms have been managed with intratympanic steroid therapy. No satisfactory comparative effectiveness study to support this practice exists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To examine the number and type of repair issues associated with the use of cochlear implants in children who have worn either the body-level or ear-level style for 4 to 5 years.
Study Design: Retrospective review.
Setting: Specialty eye and ear institute.
Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
February 2010
Objective: To investigate the spectrum of disease presentation and clinical management of primary external auditory canal cholesteatoma (EACC).
Study Design: Case series with chart review.
Setting: Specialty teaching hospital.
Objectives/hypothesis: The aim was to examine short- and long-term efficacy of the bone-anchored hearing aid (BAHA) on adults with single-sided deafness.
Study Design: Prospective investigation.
Methods: The outcome measures included the Hearing in Noise Test (HINT), Abbreviated Profile of Hearing Aid Benefit (APHAB), and Single-Sided Deafness Questionnaire (SSD).
Objectives/hypothesis: To compare the sensitivity of an objective, computerized approach to measurement of facial synkinesis with that for a subjective approach and to examine the test-retest reliability of these approaches.
Study Design: Prospective, nonrandomized, and blinded.
Methods: Remote facial motion at the upper eyelids and oral commissures during a closed-lip smile and eyelid closure were measured using a commercially available computerized motion analysis system.
Objective: To objectively evaluate facial function with a computer and video system in a group of normal adults and a group of adults who have been treated for acoustic neuroma.
Study Design: A prospective descriptive study was performed in which the experimenter performing the objective facial motion analysis was blinded to the subjective rating of facial function.
Patients: The normal subjects comprised 18 women and 16 men.
Objectives/hypothesis: To objectively measure facial motion at various facial landmarks using a video-computer interactive system.
Study Design: Clinical, prospective, non-randomized.
Methods: A video-computer interactive system, The Peak Motus Motion Measurement System, was used to study linear displacement at preselected facial landmarks in the normal and abnormal face.