Objectives: To review the decision-making paradigm in the recommendations of BCI and aMEI overlapping candidacy for patients with conductive or mixed HL, and to determine if there are differences in hearing and quality of life outcomes between these implantable hearing devices.

Methods: Retrospective data from patients receiving BCI or aMEI in the past decade were analysed. Patients were grouped into: 1. BCI candidates, 2. BCI or aMEI candidates, and 3. aMEI candidates. We compared outcomes and examined the impact of BC threshold, age at implantation, and duration of hearing loss on candidacy.

Results: 89 participants were included: 30 BCI, 37 aMEI, and 22 BCI or aMEI candidates. All groups performed similarly in aided sound field threshold testing. BCI group had lower speech scores in quiet compared to 'BCI or aMEI.' No significant differences were found in APHAB global scores. BC threshold, duration of hearing loss, and age at implantation had no significant effects.

Discussion: Outcomes were generally similar across groups, except for higher effective gain in the aMEI group.

Conclusion: Our proposed patient pathway and decision-making approach facilitate candidate selection for aMEI and BCI, aiming to optimise outcomes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14670100.2023.2267900DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bci amei
20
amei candidates
12
bci
8
amei
8
age implantation
8
duration hearing
8
hearing loss
8
amei bci
8
hearing
5
outcomes
5

Similar Publications

Objectives: To review the decision-making paradigm in the recommendations of BCI and aMEI overlapping candidacy for patients with conductive or mixed HL, and to determine if there are differences in hearing and quality of life outcomes between these implantable hearing devices.

Methods: Retrospective data from patients receiving BCI or aMEI in the past decade were analysed. Patients were grouped into: 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Semi-implantable bone conduction implants (BCI) and active middle ear implants (AMEI) for patients with sensorineural, conductive or mixed hearing loss commonly use an amplitude modulation technology to transmit power and sound signals from an external audio processor to the implant. In patients, the distance dependence of the signal amplitude is of minor importance as the skin thickness is constant and only varies between 3-7 mm. In this range, critical coupling transmission technique sufficiently reduces the variability in amplitude, but fails to provide well-defined amplitudes in many research and clinical applications such as intraoperative integrity tests where the distance range is exceeded by using sterile covers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!