4 results match your criteria: "Colorado Otologic Research Center[Affiliation]"

Loss of residual hearing after cochlear implantation.

Laryngoscope

October 1989

Colorado Otologic Research Center, Colorado Ear Clinic, Denver 80210.

Many cochlear implant recipients have some measurable hearing prior to implantation. Animal studies have demonstrated some loss of viable neural elements resulting from both mechanical insertion trauma and long-term electrical stimulation. The effect of implantation of a long intracochlear multichannel electrode array and subsequent electrical stimulation on residual hearing was evaluated.

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ECoG results in perilymphatic fistula: clinical and experimental studies.

Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg

November 1988

Colorado Ear Clinic, International Meniere's Disease Research Institute, Colorado Otologic Research Center, Denver 80210.

Patients with perilymphatic fistula have been described as having symptoms similar to Meniere's disease and endolymphatic hydrops. Direct clinical or experimental evidence linking the two inner ear disorders has been lacking. An enhancement of the summating potential observed with electrocochleography suggests a diagnosis of ELH in both of these inner ear disorders.

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Deposition of bone within the fluid spaces of the cochlea is encountered commonly in cochlear implant candidates and previously has been considered a relative contraindication to the use of multichannel intracochlear electrodes. This contraindication has been based on possible mechanical difficulty with electrode insertion as well as uncertainty about the potential benefit of the multichannel device in the patient. Fifteen profoundly deaf patients with partial ossification of the basal turn of the cochlea received implants with long intracochlear electrodes (11, Nucleus; 1, University of California at San Francisco/Storz; and 3, Symbion/Inneraid).

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